Abstract

This paper compares participation in different forms of political action between natives, immigrants and non-citizen immigrants using data from thirteen European countries across six waves of the European Social Survey. The authors highlight problems associated with previous categorizations of political action, and find that when political action is disaggregated and relative participation between groups is examined, that immigrants’ patterns of participation are not substantially different from those of natives. When comparing citizen immigrants to non-citizen immigrants, previous research has suggested that citizenship acts as a “ticket” to non-institutional, unconventional, confrontational forms of political action. The authors’ findings instead suggest a more complicated relationship between immigrant/citizenship status and preferences for political action since citizenship may facilitate participation in both so-called institutional and extra-institutional activities depending on the context of action.

Highlights

  • The integration of immigrant groups into European society continues to be a salient political issue in Europe

  • Before examining the detailed patterns of participation based on the effects of covariates,8 we first estimated the percentage of each group who participated in any type of political action

  • Without accounting for any biographical differences, we found that both immigrant groups were substantially less likely to participate. 53.2% of natives reported having participated in at least one type of political action in the last 12 months, compared to 46.2% of immigrant citizens and 35.9% of immigrant non-citizens

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Summary

Introduction

The integration of immigrant groups into European society (which includes a growing presence of non-citizen immigrants) continues to be a salient political issue in Europe. Non-citizens, are overall less likely than natives to participate politically, their patterns of participation across different types of activity are very similar.

Results
Conclusion
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