The gap between public perception of immigrant criminality and the research consensus on immigrants’ actual rates of criminal participation is persistent and cross-cultural. While the available evidence shows that immigrants worldwide tend to participate in criminal activity at rates slightly lower than the native-born, media and political discourse portraying immigrants as uniquely crime-prone remains a pervasive global phenomenon. This apparent disconnect is rooted in the dynamics of othering, or the tendency to dehumanize and criminalize identifiable out-groups. Given that most migration decisions are motivated by economic factors, othering is commonly used to justify subjecting immigrants to exploitative labor practices, with criminaliz...
This paper focuses on empirical connections between crime and immigration, studying two large waves ...
Domestic and international events -- such as the recent migrant caravans from Central and South Amer...
56 pagesThe media, public policy, and popular opinion are consistently driven by the perception that...
Researchers studying the relationship between immigration and crime frequently note the discrepancy ...
Are immigrants crime prone? In America, this question has been posed since the turn of the 20th cen...
Immigration and its relationship with crime have long been discussed and researched in a variety of ...
A popular perception is that immigration causes higher crime rates. Yet, historical and contemporary...
When viewing the criminal justice system, it is always investigated through a criminological approac...
The effects of immigrants on crime has been the subject of hostile conversations and bold claims. As...
The increasing ethnic/racial diversity that stems from immigration can positively impact economic an...
Historically in the United States, periods of large-scale immigration have been accompanied by perce...
Topics of immigration and crime often receive national attention, despite evidence of the “immigrant...
This study examined Americans\u27 perceptions of immigrants as threats and their implications on imm...
Since the 1960s both crime rates and the share of immigrants among the American population have more...
Much of the concern about immigration adversely affecting crime derives from the fact that immigrant...
This paper focuses on empirical connections between crime and immigration, studying two large waves ...
Domestic and international events -- such as the recent migrant caravans from Central and South Amer...
56 pagesThe media, public policy, and popular opinion are consistently driven by the perception that...
Researchers studying the relationship between immigration and crime frequently note the discrepancy ...
Are immigrants crime prone? In America, this question has been posed since the turn of the 20th cen...
Immigration and its relationship with crime have long been discussed and researched in a variety of ...
A popular perception is that immigration causes higher crime rates. Yet, historical and contemporary...
When viewing the criminal justice system, it is always investigated through a criminological approac...
The effects of immigrants on crime has been the subject of hostile conversations and bold claims. As...
The increasing ethnic/racial diversity that stems from immigration can positively impact economic an...
Historically in the United States, periods of large-scale immigration have been accompanied by perce...
Topics of immigration and crime often receive national attention, despite evidence of the “immigrant...
This study examined Americans\u27 perceptions of immigrants as threats and their implications on imm...
Since the 1960s both crime rates and the share of immigrants among the American population have more...
Much of the concern about immigration adversely affecting crime derives from the fact that immigrant...
This paper focuses on empirical connections between crime and immigration, studying two large waves ...
Domestic and international events -- such as the recent migrant caravans from Central and South Amer...
56 pagesThe media, public policy, and popular opinion are consistently driven by the perception that...