Dr. David Bell

NTNU

david.a.bell@ntnu.no

Portrett av Dr. David Bell

Thesis:

European Attitudes Towards Immigrants: Exploring Anti-Immigrant Attitudes and Welfare Chauvinism in Contemporary Europe (2023)

https://bibsys-almaprimo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/f/16tjma9/TN_cdi_cristin_nora_11250_3070634

Summary of the doctoral thesis:

My doctoral thesis investigated different aspects of attitudes towards immigrants in contemporary Europe. It explored welfare chauvinism, anti-immigrant attitudes, anti-Muslim attitudes and racist attitudes. This was done on several different levels across four peer-reviewed articles. It begins with an article investigating anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim attitudes in 34 European countries across a 27-year time period. Following this, the next article explores welfare chauvinism across 19 European countries in 2016. Finally, the two remaining articles each explored welfare chauvinistic and racist attitudes, respectively, in what is often considered the most tolerant and intolerant parts of Europe, the Nordic countries and Central and Eastern Europe.

The main findings of the doctoral thesis provide insight into how individuals respond to immigration across countries and thereby contribute to the understanding of how to alleviate tension between immigrants and members of the majority populations. Several conclusions can be drawn. The first of these is that there is a worrying trend of intolerance towards outgroups in Eastern Europe, which has continued to grow since 1999. In Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic, high levels of intolerance towards immigrants with a different skin colour can also be found across the political spectrum before the refugee crisis of 2015–2016. I explain that this is largely due to the low levels of immigration in Eastern Europe, which prevents intergroup contact to break some of the stereotypes majority populations have towards immigrants. In contrast, Western European countries have a long history of immigration, and another prevalent finding is that Western Europeans are becoming increasingly tolerant of immigrants.

The doctoral thesis also investigated welfare chauvinism in Europe and found that the more objective macroeconomic conditions of a country were poor predictors of welfare chauvinistic attitudes. Individuals’ perceptions of macroeconomic conditions, such as the economic situation of the country and the state of the health services, seem to be more relevant for understanding the phenomenon. This is important, as individuals often have flawed perceptions of reality. In the Nordic region, welfare chauvinism was found to be mostly directed towards culturally dissimilar immigrants. Additionally, the most exclusionary form of welfare chauvinism appears to be almost non-existent among countries in this region, whereas a more moderate form is very prevalent. It also needs emphasizing that these moderate forms of welfare chauvinism are more exclusionary than current policies are in all three of the countries sampled, which may indicate declining support for the Nordic universal welfare state.