Working group Queen Bee Immigrant Effects of status perception on immigration attitudes Add to calendar 2024-01-23 17:30 2024-01-23 18:45 Europe/Rome Queen Bee Immigrant Hybrid Event Sala del Capitolo and Zoom YYYY-MM-DD Print Share: Share on Facebook Share on BlueSky Share on X Share on LinkedIn Send by email Scheduled dates Jan 23 2024 17:30 - 18:45 CET Hybrid Event, Sala del Capitolo and Zoom Organised by Department of Political and Social Sciences This session of the Political Behaviour Colloquium features a presentation by Biljana Meiske (Max Weber Fellow, EUI). This work examines a seemingly counter-intuitive phenomenon observed in many Western democracies, whereby parts of the immigrant population oppose new waves of immigration. I propose a mechanism based on group status distribution that, complementarily to other considerations, can help to explain these preferences. I hypothesise that relative status deprivation, that is, the degree to which a given national/ethnic group is ranked low in the ethnic status hierarchy of the host country, has a negative impact on the attitudes of its members toward even lower-ranked groups. In an experiment run with a sample of participants with an immigration background residing in Germany (N=1,159), I manipulate participants' status perceptions by providing them with either a positive or a negative evaluation of their national/ethnic in-group, as evaluated by a separate group of native-majority (German) participants. The results show that receiving a negative (rather than positive) evaluation of their in-group leads the participants to express more negative views of the refugees from the Middle East and to significantly decrease their willingness to donate to an organisation supporting refugees, while not altering their generosity in a general setting unrelated to immigration. I additionally show that participants rely on the received evaluation of their in-group to update their perception of the norms surrounding prejudice expression toward the low-status groups in the host society. Finally, the results show that the treatment affects not only the privately held attitudes but also the participants' willingness to publicly express them, as participants holding critical views of the refugees disclose them more readily when under the observation of the native-majority participants if they received a negative (rather than positive) evaluation of their in-group.The Zoom link will be sent upon registration. If you would like to receive the paper, please contact PoliticalBehaviour.Colloquium@eui.eu. Related events