Gp. Freeman, IMMIGRATION AS A SOURCE OF POLITICAL DISCONTENT AND FRUSTRATION IN WESTERN DEMOCRACIES, Studies in comparative international development, 32(3), 1997, pp. 42-64
It appears evident that immigration has been a source of political dis
content and frustration in Western democracies, but how much and why?
This article describes the migration context of three sets of Western
democracies and then explores plausible linkages between the scale, ti
ming, and characteristics of migration, and the substance and process
of migration policies, on the one hand, and support for government, on
the other. Trying to move beyond plausibility, I discuss indirect ind
icators of the impact of immigration on Western publics: attitudes tow
ard immigration policy and immigrants, support for extremist parties,
and acts of violence and disorder linked to anti-immigrant or racist m
otives. Conclusions are qualified because political malaise is overdet
ermined. Immigration is undeniably a contributing factor, but it is ti
ed up with more general developments so that its independent effect re
mains unspecified.