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Disease and prejudice: risk attribution to ethno-racial groups over the course of a pandemic
[journal article]
Abstract Past research suggests that disease outbreaks drive prejudice towards minorities as they increase economic and disease threats. Based on an open-ended survey question distributed to 7,902 German residents over the course of one year of the Covid-19 pandemic (April 2020 to April 2021), we investigate... view more
Past research suggests that disease outbreaks drive prejudice towards minorities as they increase economic and disease threats. Based on an open-ended survey question distributed to 7,902 German residents over the course of one year of the Covid-19 pandemic (April 2020 to April 2021), we investigate the link between life-threatening events and ethno-racial prejudice. We find that pandemic-related threats only drive respondents' tendency to scapegoat ethno-racial groups if they hold left and center leaning ideologies. However, for far-right supporters who are the most likely to attribute the spread of Covid-19 to ethno-racial groups, pandemic-related threats do not affect that attribution. We further find that threat theories are of limited relevance for explaining which ethno-racial groups are targeted: respondents held Chinese accountable at the beginning of the pandemic but quickly shifted their attention to immigrants - a salient figure in pre-Covid-19 rightist rhetoric. We show that ideology, more than pandemic-induced threat, continues to drive prejudice and demonstrate the under-utilized advantages of using open-ended survey questions for understanding the dynamics of intergroup prejudice.... view less
Keywords
ethnicity; race; political ideology; political right; prejudice; contagious disease; threat; stigmatization
Classification
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
Free Keywords
COVID-19 pandemic; Far-right
Document language
English
Publication Year
2024
Page/Pages
p. 2920-2942
Journal
Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 50 (2024) 12
ISSN
1469-9451
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed