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Research Article

Multilevel Analysis of Social and Policy Acceptance of Immigrants across European Countries and Its Implications for Comparative Policy

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Pages 416-467 | Received 06 Nov 2019, Accepted 26 May 2020, Published online: 05 Oct 2020
 

Abstract

With the influx of African and Middle Eastern refugees to Europe, the interest in immigrants has increased. This study analyzes how individual-level and country-level variables affect social and policy acceptance. It finds that personal ties and life satisfaction determine acceptance. Also, individual and contextual variables influence acceptance. Direction and significance of the predictor’s impact depends on each national context. Skilled labor (+), ideology (left, +), knowledge (+), government spending (–), and crime rate (–) only affect social acceptance whereas social contact (+), unemployment rate (–), party seats of left/socialist (+), and ethnic diversity (+) affect policy.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Jaesun Wang

Jaeesun Wang received PH.D. from Korea University. His research topics include the comparative policy analysis, cultural theory and safety policy

Sunhee Kim

Sunhee Kim Ph. D. from Korea University. Her research topics include the welfare policy, institutional analysis and safety/risk analysis

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