K. Knudsen, SCANDINAVIAN NEIGHBORS WITH DIFFERENT CHARACTER - ATTITUDES TOWARD IMMIGRANTS AND NATIONAL IDENTITY IN NORWAY AND SWEDEN, Acta sociologica, 40(3), 1997, pp. 223-243
This article takes up a theme of growing importance in the European an
d Scandinavian context, namely national sentiments and reactions towar
d new immigrants. More specifically, I analyse possible links between
aspects of national identity and fear of foreigners - or xenophobia -
in Norway and Sweden. Such ideas involve hypotheses at different level
s and imply a step-by-step approach, analytically and empirically. It
is argued that the concept of national identity could be specified wit
hin at least two dimensions: national chauvinism and system legitimacy
, and it is further hypothesized that these factors affect xenophobia
in a nuanced manner. The empirical analyses build and test a proper me
asurement model for the three concepts (chauvinism, legitimacy and xen
ophobia), later developed into a complex causal model. These analyses
rely on recent advances in structural equation modelling (SEM) for the
treatment of ordinal data and the handling of different covariance as
well as mean structures. Data for Norway and Sweden come from the new
national identity module collected in 1995 by ISSP. Results from vari
ous LISREL analyses support the crucial notion of a common measurement
model for the two samples, making comparisons within and between coun
tries more meaningful than otherwise. Findings demonstrate similar att
itude structures for Norwegians and Swedes. Furthermore, the extended
causal analysis shows that chauvinism and legitimacy clearly affect xe
nophobia on the individual level, partly also explaining national diff
erences. However, even when differences of such sentiments are taken i
nto account Norwegians still stand out as the more xenophobic, thus po
inting toward the need for supplementary interpretations.