Framing immigrants as seekers of social benefits: the impact of the Great Recession at the family-level and the development of anti-immigrant anxieties

Substantial research has addressed the association between economic factors (e.g., employment rate) and perception of immigrants among the general public in the host societies. This study used the Transatlantic Trends Survey 2014 to examine whether the characterization of immigrants as social benef...

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Main Author: Luis Fernández-Barutell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Granada 2019-06-01
Series:Global Social Work
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistaseug.ugr.es/index.php/tsg/article/view/8494
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spelling doaj-a3a3617646e84655b1b6ab0362b4bb132021-06-26T11:42:47ZengUniversidad de GranadaGlobal Social Work2013-67572019-06-0191610.30827/tsg-gsw.v9i16.84947019Framing immigrants as seekers of social benefits: the impact of the Great Recession at the family-level and the development of anti-immigrant anxietiesLuis Fernández-Barutell0University of Illinois at Chicago Substantial research has addressed the association between economic factors (e.g., employment rate) and perception of immigrants among the general public in the host societies. This study used the Transatlantic Trends Survey 2014 to examine whether the characterization of immigrants as social benefits seekers is related to one´s family financial situation being greatly affected by the Great Recession. We conducted a series of ordinal logistic regressions to compare three different geopolitical contexts, namely the United States, the Southern Europe region, and the triad France-Germany-United Kingdom. Our results confirmed that framing immigrants as social benefits seekers is indeed related to one´s family being greatly impacted by the Great Recession. Significantly, the direction of such association varies among contexts, as those greatly impacted by the crisis in Southern Europe showed lower odds of framing immigrants as social benefits seekers, while the opposite happening in both the United States and the triad France-Germany-United Kingdom. Recommendations for practice and research are discussed.   https://revistaseug.ugr.es/index.php/tsg/article/view/8494ImmigrationGreat Recessionsocial welfaretransnationalismsocial rights
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Luis Fernández-Barutell
spellingShingle Luis Fernández-Barutell
Framing immigrants as seekers of social benefits: the impact of the Great Recession at the family-level and the development of anti-immigrant anxieties
Global Social Work
Immigration
Great Recession
social welfare
transnationalism
social rights
author_facet Luis Fernández-Barutell
author_sort Luis Fernández-Barutell
title Framing immigrants as seekers of social benefits: the impact of the Great Recession at the family-level and the development of anti-immigrant anxieties
title_short Framing immigrants as seekers of social benefits: the impact of the Great Recession at the family-level and the development of anti-immigrant anxieties
title_full Framing immigrants as seekers of social benefits: the impact of the Great Recession at the family-level and the development of anti-immigrant anxieties
title_fullStr Framing immigrants as seekers of social benefits: the impact of the Great Recession at the family-level and the development of anti-immigrant anxieties
title_full_unstemmed Framing immigrants as seekers of social benefits: the impact of the Great Recession at the family-level and the development of anti-immigrant anxieties
title_sort framing immigrants as seekers of social benefits: the impact of the great recession at the family-level and the development of anti-immigrant anxieties
publisher Universidad de Granada
series Global Social Work
issn 2013-6757
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Substantial research has addressed the association between economic factors (e.g., employment rate) and perception of immigrants among the general public in the host societies. This study used the Transatlantic Trends Survey 2014 to examine whether the characterization of immigrants as social benefits seekers is related to one´s family financial situation being greatly affected by the Great Recession. We conducted a series of ordinal logistic regressions to compare three different geopolitical contexts, namely the United States, the Southern Europe region, and the triad France-Germany-United Kingdom. Our results confirmed that framing immigrants as social benefits seekers is indeed related to one´s family being greatly impacted by the Great Recession. Significantly, the direction of such association varies among contexts, as those greatly impacted by the crisis in Southern Europe showed lower odds of framing immigrants as social benefits seekers, while the opposite happening in both the United States and the triad France-Germany-United Kingdom. Recommendations for practice and research are discussed.  
topic Immigration
Great Recession
social welfare
transnationalism
social rights
url https://revistaseug.ugr.es/index.php/tsg/article/view/8494
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