What Europeans Think About Immigration and Why It Matters
Availability: Not yet published
- Categories: Asylum and Immigration
- Publisher: OUP - Oxford University Press
- ISBN: 9780192889942
- Publication Date: 06/25/2026
- Binding: Paperback
- Number of pages: 224
Summary
Immigration is one of the most polarising and political consequential issues in 21st-century Europe. What Europeans Think About Immigration and Why It Matters
offers a powerful and comprehensive analysis of the matter, mapping not
only what Europeans think about immigration, but why they think it, how
those attitudes are formed, and what they mean for the political future
of Europe.
Drawing on vast quantities of high-quality survey
data spanning decades, countries, and crises, and combining insights
from political science, psychology, sociology, and public policy, James
Dennison and Andrew Geddes provide a new, interdisciplinary framework
for understanding immigration attitudes. They explain how early-life
socialization, emotional predispositions, values, media, economic
conditions, and national contexts interact to shape how Europeans
perceive immigration. With attitudes shown to be more stable,
multidimensional, and resistant to change than many politicians,
journalists, and policymakers assume, the book debunks common myths and
reveals the complex interplay between beliefs, feelings, and facts that
drive public opinion.
Beyond identifying what people think, the
book offers a theoretical and empirical framework for understanding
salience—why immigration becomes politically important at some times but
not others. It explains how and why immigration rises up the public
agenda, why it resonates with some voters more than others, and what
this means for party competition, policymaking, and the communication
strategies used by politicians, journalists, and activists. Dennison and
Geddes explore how salience, not just sentiment, has been key to the
rise of radical-right parties and to far-reaching shifts in national and
EU-level migration policies.
This book is essential reading for
scholars, students, policymakers, and anyone seeking to understand the
deeper cognitive, emotional, and structural forces that shape how we see
and govern migration.
Table of contents
1:Why It Matters What Europeans Think About Immigration
Part I. What Europeans Think About Immigration
2:What Are Attitudes to Immigration?
3:Explaining What Europeans Think About Immigration
4:The Need for Narratives on Immigration
Part II. Why Attitudes to Immigration Matter
5:Why Attitudes to Immigration Matter for Party Politics
6:Why Attitudes to Immigration Matter for Migration Policies
7:Why Attitudes to Immigration Matter for Communication
8:Why Attitudes to Immigration Matter for the Future of Europe
9:Conclusions