The existence of a gap between public preferences for more restrictive immigration policies and relatively expansive immigration policy in Western democracies has received considerable attention. Sometimes, this gap has been explained by the nature of immigration policies: dominated by elites while the public remained uninterested. In many countries, however, immigration has gained considerable salience among the public. There are competing expectations and accounts relating to whether policy-makers ignore or follow public demands on immigration. In this article we examine the potential drivers of variations in the opinion–policy gap on immigration in seven countries (1995–2010). We analyse the effect of the politicisation of immigration on...
Mass immigration has become an enduring feature of open, integrated and dynamic economies, with mos...
This chapter aims to investigate whether (restrictive) policy measures on migration across seven Eur...
Several studies of cross-national attitudes on immigration use a theory of self-interest that focuse...
The existence of a gap between public preferences for more restrictive immigration policies and rela...
The existence of a gap between public preferences for more restrictive immigration policies and rela...
The existence of a gap between public preferences for more restrictive immigration policies and rela...
Despite a rich literature on the factors influencing the public opinion on immigration, less is know...
A large body of research suggests that immigration policy-making in liberal democracies overlooks mo...
We examine the links between public opinion and policy in the UK over the past thirty years. We show...
This account reviews the state of the literature on migration since the West European Politics speci...
Supplementary material for: “The Gap between Public Preferences and Policies on Immigration: A Compa...
We are experiencing a wave of globalization that includes everything but labour. In this paper, we a...
Although ambivalence characterizes the stance of scholars toward the desirability of close opinion-p...
Much of the literature on migration policy has proclaimed a gap between what parties say and what pa...
We argue that widely accepted elitist and clientelist models of immigration policy in the United Sta...
Mass immigration has become an enduring feature of open, integrated and dynamic economies, with mos...
This chapter aims to investigate whether (restrictive) policy measures on migration across seven Eur...
Several studies of cross-national attitudes on immigration use a theory of self-interest that focuse...
The existence of a gap between public preferences for more restrictive immigration policies and rela...
The existence of a gap between public preferences for more restrictive immigration policies and rela...
The existence of a gap between public preferences for more restrictive immigration policies and rela...
Despite a rich literature on the factors influencing the public opinion on immigration, less is know...
A large body of research suggests that immigration policy-making in liberal democracies overlooks mo...
We examine the links between public opinion and policy in the UK over the past thirty years. We show...
This account reviews the state of the literature on migration since the West European Politics speci...
Supplementary material for: “The Gap between Public Preferences and Policies on Immigration: A Compa...
We are experiencing a wave of globalization that includes everything but labour. In this paper, we a...
Although ambivalence characterizes the stance of scholars toward the desirability of close opinion-p...
Much of the literature on migration policy has proclaimed a gap between what parties say and what pa...
We argue that widely accepted elitist and clientelist models of immigration policy in the United Sta...
Mass immigration has become an enduring feature of open, integrated and dynamic economies, with mos...
This chapter aims to investigate whether (restrictive) policy measures on migration across seven Eur...
Several studies of cross-national attitudes on immigration use a theory of self-interest that focuse...