Impact of National Pandemic Lockdowns on Perceived Threat of Immigrants: A Natural Quasi-Experiment Across 23 Countries

Author:

Han Qing12,Zheng Bang34ORCID,Leander N. Pontus5ORCID,Agostini Maximilian5,Gützkow Ben5ORCID,Kreienkamp Jannis5,Kutlaca Maja6,Lemay Edward P.7ORCID,Stroebe Wolfgang5,vanDellen Michelle R.8ORCID,Bélanger Jocelyn J.9,

Affiliation:

1. University of Oxford, UK

2. University of Bristol, UK

3. Imperial College London, UK

4. London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, UK

5. University of Groningen, The Netherlands

6. Durham University, UK

7. University of Maryland, College Park, USA

8. University of Georgia, Athens, USA

9. New York University Abu Dhabi, UAE

Abstract

Xenophobia and anti-immigrant attacks rose during the COVID-19 pandemic, yet this may not be solely due to the disease threat. According to theories of frustration and scapegoating, situational obstructions and deprivation can motivate prejudice against outgroups. Using a global natural quasi-experimental design, this study tests whether the restrictiveness of national lockdowns can explain higher individual-level perceptions of immigrant threat. Data of 45,894 participants from 23 countries were analyzed. Both lockdown duration and lockdown severity were positively associated with individuals’ perceived threat of immigrants. The lockdown effects were independent of objective and subjective measures of disease threat, and there was no evidence that disease threat drives people’s prejudice toward immigrants. Subgroup analysis suggested the lockdown effects were reliable in Europe and the Americas, but not in Asia. These findings suggest a need to mitigate frustration and scapegoating when implementing lockdowns, and to distinguish the influence of societal restrictions from disease threat.

Funder

European Regional Development Fund

New York University Abu Dhabi

Government of Spain

University of Groningen

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

Reference56 articles.

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