When I Was Growing Up: The Lasting Impact of Immigrant Presence on Native-Born American Attitudes towards Immigrants and Immigration

Author:

Eger Maureen A1ORCID,Mitchell Jeffrey1ORCID,Hjerm Mikael1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology, Umeå University, 90187 Umeå, Sweden

Abstract

Abstract Scholarship, including seminal research on prejudice, identifies adolescence as a critical period for the development of attitudes. Yet most sociological research on prejudice, especially in the form of anti-immigrant sentiment, focuses on the relationship between contemporaneous social conditions and attitudes towards out-groups while neglecting the demographic context during one’s impressionable years. Therefore, we design research to investigate the relationship among temporally distal and temporally proximal sub-national contexts and native-born attitudes towards immigration and immigrants. To do this, we merge geocoded data from the General Social Survey (1994–2016) with a unique US state-level dataset (1900–2015). Results from multilevel models reveal that immigrant presence during adolescence is a more consistent predictor of attitudes towards immigration and immigrants in adulthood. Thus, while the majority of sociological research on anti-immigrant sentiment asks if societal conditions matter, our results suggest that a more important question is when the context matters.

Funder

Marianne and Marcus Wallenberg Foundation

Swedish Foundation for Humanities and Social Sciences

Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

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