Abstract

Managing immigration is a challenge at the political, economic, and social levels. Clarifying the social psychological antecedents behind the onset of negative attitudes towards immigrants might help overcome this challenge. The present study investigates the relationships between people’s experience of social exclusion, feelings of generalized interpersonal trust, and anti-immigrant attitudes across 23 European countries. We used data from the European Social Survey 8 (2016), employing a representative sample of the European population. A 1–1–1 multilevel mediation model showed that: (a) the higher the experience of social exclusion, the lower the generalized trust towards others; (b) the experience of social exclusion related positively and directly with anti-immigration attitudes; and (c) generalized interpersonal trust mediated the relationship between experienced social exclusion and anti-immigrant attitudes so that the experience of being socially excluded reduced feelings of generalized interpersonal trust that, in turn, promoted hostile attitudes towards immigrants. Taken together, these results create a platform for future research on the emergence of negative attitudes towards immigrants and factors that might facilitate the development of a climate of integration and acceptance.

Highlights

  • The migratory flows towards Europe are constant, and their management is one of the most important challenges for the transformation of Western and European societies

  • We focus on social exclusion and interpersonal trust as determining factors of anti-immigration attitudes

  • Many studies have investigated the possible causes of the emergence of hostile attitudes towards immigrants, to the best of our knowledge, none has tried to examine the possible role that social exclusion and interpersonal trust may jointly have

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Summary

Introduction

The migratory flows towards Europe are constant, and their management is one of the most important challenges for the transformation of Western and European societies. An accurate understanding of the social psychological dynamics linked to immigration could shed light on the importance of specific factors. The increase in anti-immigration attitudes has often been traced back to economic factors. Some studies showed that natives fear that the presence of immigrants in the host country may affect the labour market by depressing wages (Mayda 2006; Scheve and Slaughter 2001), lead to a heavier tax burden, and increase pressure on welfare and social services (Facchini and Mayda 2009; Hanson et al Slaughter 2007). Other studies related anti-immigration attitudes with non-economic factors; for example, negative attitudes towards immigrants have been associated with social categorization processes (Tajfel and Turner 1986), which lead people to evaluate others on the basis of their ethnic origin (Brown 2011) and produce the emergence of prejudices and stereotypes (Roets and Van Hiel 2011). As shown by a recent meta-analysis by Pottie-Sherman and Wilkes (2017), this hypothesis has received only partial support

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