What do Americans want from immigration policy and why? In the rise of a polarized and acrimonious immigration debate, leading accounts see racial anxieties and disputes over the meaning of American nationhood coming to a head. The resurgence of parochial identities has breathed new life into old worries about the vulnerability of the American Creed. This book tells a different story, one in which creedal values remain hard at work in shaping ordinary Americans’ judgements about immigration. Levy and Wright show that perceptions of civic fairness – based on multiple, often competing values deeply rooted in the country’s political culture – are the dominant guideposts by which most Americans navigate immigration controversies most of the time and explain why so many Americans simultaneously hold a mix of pro-immigrant and anti-immigrant positions. The authors test the relevance and force of the theory over time and across issue domains.
Immigration and the American Ethos
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| Book Author | Morris Levy & Matthew Wright |
|---|---|
| Book Series | Cambridge Studies in Public Opinion and Political Psychology |
| Format | eBook |
| ISBN | 9781108772174 |
| Language | English |
| Pages | 622 |
| Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
| Publication Date | 2019-12-15 |

