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Human values and ideological beliefs as predictors of attitudes toward immigrants across 20 countries: The country-level moderating role of threat
Authors:Rafaella de C. R. Araújo  Magdalena Bobowik  Roosevelt Vilar  James H. Liu  Homero Gil de Zuñiga  Larissa Kus-Harbord  Nadezhda Lebedeva  Valdiney V. Gouveia
Affiliation:1. School of Psychology, Massey University, Auckland, New Zealand;2. Department of Social Psychology and Methodology of Behavior Sciences, University of the Basque Country, San Sebastián, Spain;3. Department of Communication, Media Innovation Lab, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria;4. Institute for International and Social Studies, Tallinn University, Tallinn, Estonia

Centre for Applied Cross-cultural Research, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand;5. Higher School of Economics, Russian National Research University, Moscow, Russia;6. Department of Psychology, Federal University of Paraiba, Joao Pessoa, Brazil

Abstract:Immigration is a worldwide subject of interest, and studies about attitudes toward immigrants have been frequent due to immigration crises in different locations across the globe. We aimed at understanding individual-level effects of human values and ideological beliefs (Right-Wing Authoritarianism—RWA, and Social Dominance Orientation—SDO) on attitudes toward immigrants, and whether country-level variables (perception of Islamic fundamentalism as a threat, perception of immigrants as a threat, and international migrant stock) moderate these relations. With representative samples from 20 countries (N = 21,362; the Americas, Europe, Asia, and Oceania), and using Multilevel Bayesian regressions, results showed the negative effect of RWA, SDO, and existence values on attitudes toward immigrants, and the positive effects of suprapersonal and interactive values. Cross-level interactions indicated that the effects of RWA, SDO, and suprapersonal and existence values were intensified in countries with societally high levels of perceiving Islamic fundamentalism as a threat. International migrant stock served as a country-level moderator for the effects of SDO and RWA only. When country-level moderators were included simultaneously, Islamic fundamentalism as a threat was the most consistent moderator. Framing theory is offered as a plausible explanation of these results.
Keywords:attitudes toward immigrants  cross-level interaction  human values  Islamic fundamentalism  multilevel analysis  right wing authoritarianism  social dominance orientation  threat
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