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VALUES AND SUPPORT FOR IMMIGRATION: A CROSSCOUNTRY COMPARISON

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Title: VALUES AND SUPPORT FOR IMMIGRATION: A CROSSCOUNTRY COMPARISON


1
VALUES AND SUPPORT FOR IMMIGRATION A
CROSS-COUNTRY COMPARISON
  • Eldad Davidov (University of Mannheim and
    GESIS-ZA, University of Cologne)
  • Bart Meuleman (CeSO, University of Leuven)
  • Jaak Billiet (CeSO, University of Leuven)
  • Peter Schmidt (Univeristy of Giesen)

2
Outline
  • Theoretical background
  • Research hypotheses
  • Methods measurements
  • Data
  • Cross-cultural measurement equivalence
  • Results

3
Theoretical background (1)
  • Clear distinction between attitudes and human
    values
  • Attitude an individuals disposition to react
    with a certain degree of favorableness or
    unfavorableness to an object, behavior, person,
    institution, or event or to any other
    discriminable aspect of the individuals world
    (Ajzen, 1993).
  • E.g. attitudes towards a certain immigration
    policy
  • There are as many possible attitudes as objects
    in the world

4
Theoretical background (2)
  • Human values desirable transsituational goals,
    varying in importance, that serve as guiding
    principles in the life of a person or other
    social entity (Schwartz, 1994).
  • Schwartz postulated a theory that describes 10
    basic types of human values that are
    distinguished by their motivational goals

5
Theoretical background (3)
6
Theoretical background (3)
7
Theoretical background (4)
  • Human values can be seen as abstract principles
    that guide concrete attitudes
  • Values will influence the attitude toward a
    certain object if this object has relevant
    consequences for the attainment of the
    motivational goals that are associated with these
    respective values.

8
Research hypotheses (1)
  • How does a certain immigration policy relate to
    the motivational goals that are associated with
    certain human values?
  • Immigration is an obstacle for conservation since
    immigration often brings along changing
    traditions and norms.
  • Admitting immigrants offers possibilities to
    attain self-trancendence
  • Far less consensus on the relation with openness
    to change and self-enhancement

9
Research hypotheses (2)
  • This leads to the following research hypotheses
  • Conservation values coincide with more negative
    attitudes towards a liberal immigration policy
  • Self-transcendence values coincide with more
    positive attitudes towards a liberal immigration
    policy
  • In the past, empirical evidence was found for
    these hypotheses (SagivSchwartz 1995 Adorno,
    Frenkel-Brunswick, Levinson, and Sanford, 1950
    Schwartz, 1994 ) .
  • There is no theoretical consensus regarding the
    relation of the other value dimensions and
    attitudes to immigration policies.

10
Research hypotheses (2)
  • Based on Schwartzs argument regarding the
    universality of values, and
  • Since there was no other evidence in the
    literature for differences
  • We do not have reasons to expect effect
    differences of the values across countries.

11
Methods measurements (1)
  • Data ESS round 1 (2002-03)
  • 19 countries (3 countries were omitted Israel,
    Luxemburg and Italy)

12
Methods measurements (2)
  • Measurements of human values based on Portrait
    Values Questionnaire (Schwartz et al. 2001)
  • 11 verbal portraits for conservaton and
    self-trancendance valuesSelf-transcendence
    Universalism (UN) and Benevolence (BE)
  • Ipeqopt/un1 Important that people are treated
    equally and have equal opportunities
  • Ipudrst/un2 Important to understand different
    people
  • Impenv/un3 Important to care for nature and
    environment

13
Methods measurements (3)
  • Benevolence (BE)
  • Iphlppl/be1 Important to help people and care
    for others well-being
  • Iplylfr/be2 Important to be loyal to friends and
    devote to close people
  • Conservation-by tradition, conformity and
    security
  • Tradition (TR)
  • Ipmodst/tr1 Important to be humble and modest,
    not draw attention
  • Imptrad/tr2 Important to follow traditions and
    customs

14
Methods measurements (4)
  • Conformity (CO)
  • Ipfrule/co1 Important to do what is told and
    follow rules
  • Ipbhprp/co2 Important to behave properly
  • Security (SEC)
  • Impsafe/sec1 Important to live in secure and
    safe surroundings
  • Ipstrgv/sec2 Important that government is strong
    and ensures safety
  • How much is this person like you? Very much like
    me (1) Not like me at all (6)

15
Methods measurements (5)
  • Attitudes towards immigration policy are
    operationalised by two scales
  • Willingness to allow immigrants into the
    countryTo what extent do you think country
    should allow people of a different race to come
    and live here? (4-point scale many 1, some
    2, a few 3, none 4)immigrants from poorer
    countries in Europeimmigrants from richer
    countries outside Europe immigrants from poorer
    countries outside Europe

16
Methods measurements (6)
  • Support for conditions for immigrationHow
    important you think each of these things should
    be in deciding whether someone born, brought up
    and living outside country should be able to
    come and live here?
  • good educational qualifications
  • work skills needed in country
  • 11-point scale 0 extremely unimportant 10
    extremely important

17
Self-transcendence

Allow

-
No Conditions
Conservation
-
18
Methods measurements (7)
  • Before cross-cultural comparisons can be made,
    measurement equivalence has to be guaranteed
  • whether or not, under different conditions of
    observing and studying phenomena, measurement
    operations yield measures of the same attribute
    (Horn McArdle 1992)
  • If it is guaranteed, then cross-cultural
    comparison is allowed

19
Measurement Invariance
Group A
Group B
dB11
Item a
dA11
Item a
lB111
lA111
fB11 k B1
fA11 k A1
?B1
?A1
lB21
lA21
dB22
dA22
Item b
Item b
lB31
lA31
Item c
Item c
dB33
dA33
fB21
fA21
dB44
dA44
Item d
Item d
lB421
lA421
?B2
?A2
lB52
lA52
Item e
Item e
dB55
dA55
lB62
lA62
fB22 k B2
fA22 k A2
dB66
dA66
Item f
Item f
20
Steps in testing for Measurement Invariance
  • Configural Invariance
  • Metric Invariance
  • Scalar Invariance
  • Invariance of Factor Variances
  • Invariance of Factor Covariances
  • Invariance of latent Means
  • Invariance of Unique Variances

21
Steps in testing for Measurement Invariance
  • Configural Invariance
  • Metric Invariance
  • Equal factor loadings
  • Same scale units in both groups
  • Presumption for the comparison of latent means
  • Scalar Invariance
  • Invariance of Factor Variances
  • Invariance of Factor Covariances
  • Invariance of latent Means
  • Invariance of Unique Variances

22
Full vs. Partial Invariance
  • Concept of partial invariance introduced by
    Byrne, Shavelson Muthén (1989)
  • Procedure
  • Constrain complete matrix
  • Use modification indices to find non-invariant
    parameters and then relax the constraint
  • Compare with the unrestricted model
  • Steenkamp Baumgartner (1998) Two indicators
    with invariant loadings and intercepts are
    sufficient for mean comparisons
  • One of them can be the marker one further
    invariant item

23
Methods measurements (8)
  • To sum up to be able to compare regression
    coefficients, at least metric equivalence is
    needed.
  • Metric equivalence can be tested by means of
    multigroup structural equation modeling.

24
Methods measurements (7)
  • Metric equivalence equality of factor loadings
  • with

25
Methods measurements (8)
  • For some items, the equivalence constraints had
    to be relaxed.
  • Yet, for the attitude scales and the two
    higher-order value scales, at least partial
    metric equivalence was established
  • ? comparison is allowed! (cfr. Steenkamp
    Baumgartner 1998)

26
Results (1)
  • Following multigroup structural model was tested
    (expected effects between brackets)

Conservation
ALLOW
(-)
(-)
()
Self-transcendence
NO CONDITIONS
()
VALUES
ATTITUDES
27
Results (2)
  • In all countries, the effects of conservation and
    self-transcendence on ALLOW were found to be
    significant and in the expected direction.
  • However, there are differences in strength across
    countries
  • Conservation strongest in CZ, PL, SI, FR, GB,
    GR weakest in SE, DK, AT, CH
  • Self-transcendence strongest in PL, GB, FI, CZ
    weakest in SE, PT, DK

28
Clusters
  • A test of clusters of countries was conducted.
    For this, unstandardized regression coeficients
    were investigated by a sequence of chi-square
    difference tests.

29
Results (3)
Self-transcendence on ALLOW
Conservation on ALLOW
30
Results (3)
  • Conservation has a negative effect on NO
    CONDITIONS in 17 countries.
  • Self-transcendence has a positive significant
    effect in 16 countries, and a negative one in 1
    country (Greece)
  • Here, even more cross-national differences in
    effect size.

31
Results (3)
Self-transcendence on NO CONDITIONS
Conservation on CONDITION
32
  • In total, 69 out of 76 relations were according
    to our hypotheses.

33
The robustness of the findings in the presence of
control variables
  • age, gender, level of education, household
    income, religiosity, attendance of religious
    services and left-right orientation.
  • Education (Jackman and Muha, 1984 Coenders and
    Scheepers, 2003 Kunovich, 2004)
  • Age, economic situation, political orientation
    and religiosity (see for example Billiet, 1995
    Fetzer, 2000 Semyonov, Raijman and Gorodzeisky,
    2006)

34
  • Additionally, we controlled for four contextual
    variables, namely GDP per capita, GDP growth, the
    inflow of immigrants and the stock of foreign
    born population.

35
  • Substantive results in a multi-level analysis did
    not change.
  • the values conservation and self-transcendence
    remained the strongest predictors for attitudes
    toward immigration.
  • These explanations seem to be not exclusive but
    rather complementary.

36
Explaining effect size differences across nations
  • Effects were robust but there was some variation
    across countries.
  • Giving a sound explanation is difficult because
    of the relatively small number of units
    (countries).
  • Probably, the differences in effect sizes are the
    result of complex processes, in which certain
    characteristics of the population, historical
    path dependence and national characteristics
    interact. The fact that various of these factors
    are extremely hard to measure makes it harder to
    model them.

37
  • An attempt two national context variables,
    namely GDP per capita and the gross immigration
    inflow (per 1000 inhabitants).

38
GDP
  • Allow
  • The effects of self-transcendence and
    conservation on allow appear to be more
    pronounced in countries with a low GDP per
    capita.
  • human values give a stronger prediction of the
    willingness to allow immigrants for poorer
    countries than for richer ones.
  • No conditions
  • For the effects on no conditions, the opposite
    pattern is found human values tend to provide a
    stronger explanation in richer countries.

39
Possible explanations
  • It may be the case that in poorer countries, the
    immigration debate is focused on the quantity of
    immigration, as inhabitants of these countries
    may fear that immigration will constitute a
    competition with their already limited economic
    resources.
  • Values may be related to such fears
    (universalistic individuals may fear less than
    conservative individuals) and as a consequence be
    better predictors for allow in poorer
    countries.

40
  • The question whether migration should be
    conditioned on certain criteria on the other
    hand, may occupy a more central role in the
    debate in wealthier countries.
  • Further research is needed to verify these
    explanations

41
Inflow of immigrants
  • the inflow of immigrants is connected to the
    effect sizes for only one of the concepts, namely
    allow.
  • In countries with a high level of immigration,
    human values tend to affect allow only to a
    lesser extent.

42
Possible explanation
  • This may be due to the fact that inhabitants of
    these immigration countries have a larger amount
    of information obtained via personal
    experiences or through the mass media - at their
    disposal in the attitude formation process.
    Therefore, these persons might fall back on
    general human values only to a lesser extent than
    inhabitants without this information.
  • Even in these countries values have a substantial
    effect.

43
Conclusion (1)
  • The effects of human values on attitudes towards
    immigration policy is quite robust (69 out of 76
    hypotheses confirmed)
  • These effects remain significant when we control
    for age, gender, education and religiosity ?
    additional explanatory power
  • Human values deserve more attention than they
    have received so far

44
  • Thank you very much for your attention!!!!

45
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46
Table 6. Correlations between effect sizes and
national context variables
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