Backlash to policy decisions: How citizens react to immigrants' rights to demonstrate

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Abstract

Focusing on one specific aspect of immigrant political integration - how authorities deal with their political right to demonstrate - we show in a large-scale survey experiment that liberal policy decisions permitting demonstrations lead to a polarization in attitudes: citizens who agree with a permission become more sympathetic, while those in favor of banning become more critical of immigrants. This notion of opinion backlash to policy decisions adds a new perspective to the literature on immigration attitudes which has either assumed a congruence between public opinion and policy or ignored political sources of anti-immigrant sentiment altogether. By exploring the unintended consequences of policy decisions, we provide an alternative view and demonstrate the inherent dilemma of balancing citizen opinion and minority rights.

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APA

Traunmüller, R., & Helbling, M. (2022). Backlash to policy decisions: How citizens react to immigrants’ rights to demonstrate. Political Science Research and Methods, 10(2), 279–297. https://doi.org/10.1017/psrm.2020.44

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