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Journal ArticleDOI

Politicized Places: Explaining Where and When Immigrants Provoke Local Opposition

Daniel J. Hopkins
- 01 Feb 2010 - 
- Vol. 104, Iss: 01, pp 40-60
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TLDR
This article developed the politicized places hypothesis, an alternative that focuses on how national and local conditions interact to construe immigrants as threatening, and tested the hypothesis using new data on local anti-immigrant policies.
Abstract
In ethnic and racial terms, America is growing rapidly more diverse. Yet attempts to extend racial threat hypotheses to today's immigrants have generated inconsistent results. This article develops the politicized places hypothesis, an alternative that focuses on how national and local conditions interact to construe immigrants as threatening. Hostile political reactions to neighboring immigrants are most likely when communities undergo sudden influxes of immigrants and when salient national rhetoric reinforces the threat. Data from several sources, including twelve geocoded surveys from 1992 to 2009, provide consistent support for this approach. Time-series cross-sectional and panel data allow the analysis to exploit exogenous shifts in salient national issues such as the September 11 attacks, reducing the problem of residential self-selection and other threats to validity. The article also tests the hypothesis using new data on local anti-immigrant policies. By highlighting the interaction of local and national conditions, the politicized places hypothesis can explain both individual attitudes and local political outcomes.

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Does Exposure to the Refugee Crisis Make Natives More Hostile

TL;DR: The authors found that direct exposure to refugee arrivals induces sizable and lasting increases in natives' hostility toward refugees, immigrants, and Muslim minorities; support for restrictive asylum and immigration policies; and political engagement to effect such exclusionary policies.
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What the Demolition of Public Housing Teaches Us about the Impact of Racial Threat on Political Behavior

TL;DR: This article found that after the removal of their African American neighbors, white voters' turnout dropped by over 10 percentage points, and their change in behavior was a function of the size and proximity of the outgroup population.
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Acculturating Contexts and Anglo Opposition to Immigration in the United States

TL;DR: This article explored the impact of change in the ethnic composition of Americans' local context on their attitudes toward immigrants and immigration policy preferences, and demonstrated that over-time growth in local Hispanic populations triggers threat and opposition to immigration among whites residing in contexts with few initial Hispanics but reduces threat or opposition to immigrants among whites in context with large preexisting Hispanic populations.
Book

White Backlash: Immigration, Race, and American Politics

TL;DR: A theory of immigration backlash politics was proposed in this paper, with a focus on how immigration shapes the vote and the geography of the immigration back-lash in the United States.
Journal ArticleDOI

Terrorist Events and Attitudes toward Immigrants: A Natural Experiment ⇤

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of terrorist events on the perception of immigrants across 65 regions in nine European countries was examined using a quasi-experimental research design, and the results revealed considerable cross-national and regional variation in the effects of the event and its temporal duration.
References
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