Abstract

AbstractMigrants are often scapegoated during public health crises. Can such crises create opportunities for migrant inclusion instead? As the COVID-19 pandemic unfolds, many refugee organizations have stepped up their outreach with stories of refugees helping out in the crisis. We have partnered with the country’s leading refugee advocate organizations to test whether solidarity narratives increase public engagement with refugee advocates. We employ a Facebook experimental design to evaluate the effectiveness of refugee narratives. We test whether (1) migrant narratives framed in the context of COVID-19, (2) COVID-19 migrant narratives targeted to more or less local communities, and (3) COVID-19 migrant narratives labeled as refugee vs. immigrant efforts enhance public engagement with refugee organizations. Our results indicate that migrant narratives framed in the context of COVID-19 do not motivate greater engagement than those that make no mention of the pandemic. Our results provide suggestive evidence that locally targeted efforts motivate greater engagement. Finally, we find no difference between the “refugee” and “immigrant” label, but we show that both labels can motivate greater engagement than ads that include neither. Importantly, this is true even in the context of COVID-19, an uncertain environment where worries of backlash might be warranted. These results suggest promising strategies for migrant policy organizations to promote engagement during and possibly after the pandemic.

Highlights

  • Public health crises such as the current COVID-19 pandemic can be perilous for refugees

  • This study was a preregistered report conditionally accepted by the Journal of Experimental Political Science and uploaded with the Evidence in Governance and Politics (EGAP)/OSF Registry

  • Organizations do not seem to receive an additional boost in engagement from supporters by mentioning coronavirus directly in the ad. We suggest this may be because at the time our ads appeared on Facebook – in August 2020 – COVID-19 was already exceptionally salient: whether or not our ads mentioned coronavirus, individuals in both treatment and control would view the ads with the coronavirus pandemic already on their minds

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Public health crises such as the current COVID-19 pandemic can be perilous for refugees. Our first hypothesis tests whether this strategy effectively increases public engagement with refugee advocacy organizations. The click rates for the Mustafa and Kelli ads are displayed, and in Figure 4 we present results from our hypothesized difference-of-means tests for H1 in the left panel, H2 in the middle panel, and H3 in the right panel.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call