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%T A longitudinal investigation of integration/multiculturalism policies and attitudes towards immigrants in European countries
%A Bartram, David
%A Jarochova, Erika
%J Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
%N 1
%P 153-172
%V 48
%D 2021
%K Xenophobia; multiculturalism; panel data; control variables; ZA4804: European Values Study Longitudinal Data File 1981-2008 (EVS 1981-2008); European Social Survey, Round 7 - 2014
%@ 1469-9451
%~ FDB
%> https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-79410-5
%X A number of recent studies find that integration and multiculturalism policies help soften anti-immigrant attitudes among the broader population. These findings, however, emerge from cross-sectional analyses and are potentially vulnerable to omitted variable bias. The analysis in this paper overcomes that limitation by adopting a longitudinal approach. This approach uses data from repeated cross-sections drawn from the European Social Survey and the European Values Survey. These data can be treated as panels in a longitudinal framework once it is recognised that the relevant variables (including the attitudes variables) can be handled effectively as country-level averages. Multi-level modelling (the default approach in existing research) is not necessary; in particular, there is no need to use individual-level control variables. In a fixed-effects analysis of country-level data, adoption of more open/accommodating integration and/or multiculturalism policies does not lead to a reduction in anti-immigration sentiment. The findings of the cross-sectional studies evidently suffer from significant omitted variable bias.
%C GBR
%G en
%9 Zeitschriftenartikel
%W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org
%~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info