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A Dual Process Model of Attitudes towards Immigration: Person × Residential Area Effects in a National Sample
Authors:Chris G. Sibley  John Duckitt  Robin Bergh  Danny Osborne  Ryan Perry  Frank Asbrock  Andrew Robertson  Gavin Armstrong  Marc Stewart Wilson  Fiona Kate Barlow
Affiliation:1. University of Auckland, , New Zealand;2. Uppsala University, , Sweden;3. Philipps‐Universit?t Marburg, , Germany;4. Colmar Brunton, , New Zealand;5. Wellington City Council, , New Zealand;6. Victoria University of Wellington, , New Zealand;7. The University of Queensland, , Australia
Abstract:
This research took a person × situation approach to predicting prejudice by looking at how social worldviews interact with real‐world environmental factors to predict how people respond to immigrants within their local area. Taking a Dual Process Motivational approach, we hypothesized that a higher proportion of immigrants in the local community would be associated with negative attitudes toward immigration for respondents high in dangerous world beliefs. Conversely, we hypothesized that living in a highly affluent (as opposed to socioeconomically deprived) community would be associated with negative attitudes toward immigration for respondents high in competitive world beliefs. Both hypotheses were supported using regional information derived from national census data combined with representative survey data from a large telephone sample conducted in New Zealand (N = 6,489). These findings support the proposition that individual differences interact with specific features of the environment to predict people's levels of prejudice in distinct ways.
Keywords:social worldviews  person ×   situation  immigrant density  regional deprivation  immigration
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