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What is the context of this research?

Research in the social sciences has made notable progress in identifying a range of different factors that predict attitudes toward immigrants and immigration. Our project aims to extend this research in three key ways. First, we consider the relationships among factors from diverse research literatures in personality traits, intergroup contact, social cognition, and threat perceptions. Second, we test the effect that different types of messages can have in shifting people's attitudes. These messages have often been deployed in the media, though they have as yet to be rigorously tested and compared. Third, we measure people's attitudes towards immigrants and immigration in a rich, nuanced way that is directly connected to current policy issues.

What is the significance of this project?

This project can provide greater insight into what really drives people's attitudes toward immigrants and immigration. While we have some understanding of the major factors, we have less understanding of how these factors relate to one another, and what their relative contributions are.

Additionally, this project can help us understand whether different types of messages deployed by the media can actually be effective in shifting people's attitudes toward immigrants and immigration. To our knowledge, no study has rigorously compared these different types of messages in the American context. We'll finally be able to tell which of those popular editorials make a difference.

What are the goals of the project?

We will use an experimental survey design to test factors that contribute to people's attitudes toward immigrants and immigration, and messages that can shift these attitudes. To ensure that our survey has broad relevance, we are recruiting a nationally representative sample through Amazon Mechanical Turk. Given the immediate significance of this project for understanding public attitudes and informing current policy discussions, we are committed to sharing findings widely and through multiple avenues. We aim to publish findings in traditional journal articles and conferences papers, as well as popular media outlets (blogs, editorials). We also hope to share insights with advocates and organizations involved in immigration reform.