Migrants, asylum seekers, and refugees: Different labels for immigrants influence attitudes through perceived benefits in nine countries

Author:

Graf Sylvie12ORCID,Rubin Mark3ORCID,Assilamehou‐Kunz Yvette4ORCID,Bianchi Mauro5,Carnaghi Andrea5,Fasoli Fabio67ORCID,Finell Eerika8ORCID,Gustafsson Sendén Marie9ORCID,Shamloo Soraya Elizabeth10ORCID,Tocik Jaroslav1,Lacko David1ORCID,Sczesny Sabine2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Czech Academy of Sciences Brno Czech Republic

2. University of Bern Bern Switzerland

3. Durham University Durham United Kingdom

4. University Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris France

5. University of Trieste Trieste Italy

6. University of Surrey Guildford UK

7. Instituto Universitário de Lisboa Lisbon Portugal

8. University of Eastern Finland Kuopio Finland

9. Stockholm University Stockholm Sweden

10. University of Verona Verona Italy

Abstract

AbstractThe world is witnessing the highest level of displacement of people on record. Public discourse often uses labels to describe people on the move such as ‘migrants’, ‘asylum seekers’, or ‘refugees’ interchangeably. A preregistered study in nine countries (Australia, the Czech Republic, Finland, France, Italy, Portugal, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom; N = 2844) tested experimentally the effect of these three labels on attitudes towards immigrants and immigration policies. We found a significant difference between the label ‘migrant’ and both ‘asylum seeker’ and ‘refugee’ on the social distance scale. Participants were happier if migrants, rather than asylum seekers and refugees, were their neighbours, friends, or partners. The effect was mediated by perceived benefits, but not threats, whereby migrants were perceived to bring more benefits to receiving societies than asylum seekers and refugees. To increase the acceptance of immigrants, speakers may consider specifying the given group and emphasize benefits that immigrants bring to receiving societies.

Funder

Academy of Finland

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Social Psychology

Reference62 articles.

1. The refugees: Threatening or beneficial? Exploring the effects of positive and negative attitudes and communication on hostile media perceptions;Arlt D.;Global Media Journal,2016

2. Biased labels: An experimental study of language and stigma among individuals in recovery and health professionals

3. Social categorization and attitudinal evaluations: Illegal immigrants, refugees, or asylum seekers?;Augoustinos M.;Nouvelle Revue de Psychologie Sociale,2003

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