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Salience, preference, and asylum outcomes in Germany and the UK, 2002-2019
[journal article]
Abstract What explains different rates of positive asylum decisions in Western democracies? Legislators and bureaucrats respond to public preferences on immigration, though studies have not accounted for salience amplifying preferences. Using autoregressive models, I find relationships between salience, pref... view more
What explains different rates of positive asylum decisions in Western democracies? Legislators and bureaucrats respond to public preferences on immigration, though studies have not accounted for salience amplifying preferences. Using autoregressive models, I find relationships between salience, preferences, and asylum recognition rates in Germany and the UK, indicating that asylum administration responds to public opinion. High salience and more open immigration preferences are associated with increased asylum recognition rates in Germany, while lower rates in the UK follow high salience and restrictive preferences. Applications rejected under these adverse conditions precede increases in successful appeals, suggesting political pressure or their own preferences lead bureaucratic actors to reduce rates in the UK. These results do not support lobbying or a culture of disbelief as influences on immigration policies. Rather, they raise questions about Western democracies’ adherence to an international rules-based asylum system and highlight mechanisms by which policy responds to public opinion.... view less
Keywords
Europe; Great Britain; Federal Republic of Germany; migration; political asylum; public opinion; asylum policy; immigration policy
Classification
Migration, Sociology of Migration
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
Free Keywords
salience; Politbarometer 2003-2019
Document language
English
Publication Year
2023
Page/Pages
p. 284-306
Journal
Journal of Public Policy, 43 (2023) 2
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0143814X22000344
ISSN
1469-7815
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed