Published January 23, 2024 | Version v1
Dataset Open

For Every Action a Reaction? The Polarizing Effects of Women's Rights and Refugee Immigration

Contributors

  • 1. ROR icon University of Gothenburg
  • 2. ROR icon Leuphana University of Lüneburg

Description

Building on research on cultural threat-induced polarization, we investigate the effect of the individual-level salience of cultural threats on polarization between social liberals and conservatives. In a unique survey experiment conducted with 129,000 respondents nested in 208 regions in 27 EU member states, we manipulate the presence of two cultural threats, women’s rights, and refugee immigration, to test their polarizing effects on social liberals’ and social conservatives’ support for traditional values. We find that priming the threat of refugee immigration polarizes conservatives and liberals equally. Yet, introducing the salience of women’s rights leads to lower preferences for traditional values, particularly among more liberal respondents. Our findings demonstrate: 1) the study of backlash should distinguish individuals by their predisposition to backlash, rather than studying the population on whole; and 2) social conservatives’ backlash should be studied conjointly with social liberals’ counter-reactions to backlash. Future research may investigate why different cultural threats provoke different reactions.

Files

Files (27.5 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:5c2acfe00b7b5136120509a56046ac0d
27.5 MB Download
md5:99e3101d60a03dc56e11139e5edc76e6
10.3 kB Download