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Religion and Anti-Immigration Sentiments in Context: Field Studies in Jerusalem
Authors:Pazit Ben-Nun Bloom  Allon Vishkin  Paz Ben-Nun  Miriam Korenman  Maya Tamir
Affiliation:1. Political Science Department, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israelpazit.bennun@mail.huji.ac.il;3. Psychology Department, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel;4. Political Science Department, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel;5. Public Policy Department, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel
Abstract:ABSTRACT

Political and social changes in the past decade have rendered questions about religion and immigration more salient than ever. However, we know very little about the potential impact of religion as it operates in the real world on attitudes toward immigrants. In this investigation, we tested whether and how contextual religious cues in the public sphere might affect tolerance toward immigrants. In two studies, we compared the effects of a religious and a secular context (Study 1: religious location; Study 2: religious attire) on attitudes toward Jewish immigrants (i.e., a religious ingroup) and non-Jewish immigrants (i.e., a religious outgroup). Across studies, contextual religious cues predicted ingroup favoritism, as expressed by less social rejection toward religious ingroups and less support for anti-immigration policies affecting religious ingroups. However, contextual religious cues were unrelated to anti-immigration attitudes toward religious outgroups. In Study 2, these patterns were moderated by participants’ religiosity, such that they were found among more (but not fewer) religious participants. These findings extend prior laboratory findings and shed light on how religion influences attitudes toward immigration in rich and complex real environments.
Keywords:
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