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Anti-immigration conspiracy beliefs are associated with endorsement of conventional and violent actions opposing immigration and attitudes towards democracy across 21 countries

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posted on 2025-07-04, 13:37 authored by Emma F Thomas, Christina Stothard, Tomasz Besta, Gulcin Akbas, Julia C Becker, Maja Becker, Tymofii Brik, Maria Chayinska, Makiko Deguchi, Sandesh Dhakal, Kaltrina Kelmendi, Anna Kende, Soledad de Lemus, Paul Le Dornat, Magdalena Iwanowska, Angela Leung, Sarah Martiny, Rie Mizuki, Danny Osborne, Marek Palace, Maura Pozzi, Carlo Pistoni, Raja Intan Arifah Binti Raja Reza Shah, Pravash Kumar Raut, Saba Safdar, Katherine Stroebe, Dijana Sulejmanović, Eugene YJ Tee, Gonneke Ton, Melis UlugMelis Ulug, Ana Urbiola, Nathan Weber, Anna Włodarczyk, Martijn van Zomeren
Despite widespread speculation that conspiracy beliefs foster anti-democratic outcomes, the empirical picture is inconsistent. To clarify this literature, we examine the relationships that conspiracy beliefs have with commitment to reactionary action and criticism of democracy, focusing on a global issue: immigration. We expected that people who believe that their government uses immigration to diversify the population against citizens' wishes (anti-migration conspiracy beliefs) would be more committed to conventional and violent action to oppose immigration, and more critical of democracy. However, societal-level factors - economic performance and democratic functioning - were expected to influence (strengthen, weaken) these links. As hypothesized, multi-level analyses (N = 4353) from 21 countries revealed that economic prosperity attenuated the positive link between anti-migration conspiracy beliefs and commitment to reactionary action. Paradoxically, more democratic societies evidenced stronger links between conspiracy beliefs and conventional (but not violent) action to oppose immigration. Thus, more democratic societies appear to invite conventional forms of action to oppose immigration which may, in turn, weaken democratic norms of inclusion. Results highlight the interplay of individual- and societal-level factors underlying illiberal movements.

History

Publication status

  • Published

File Version

  • Published version

Journal

Communications psychology

ISSN

2731-9121

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Issue

1

Volume

3

Article number

66

Department affiliated with

  • Psychology Publications

Institution

University of Sussex

Full text available

  • Yes

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes

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