Influences of Discriminatory Incidents on Immigrants’ Attitudes Toward German Society
Data(s) |
18/01/2007
18/01/2007
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Resumo |
This article presents findings from a quantitative survey (N = 301) to evaluate the impact discriminatory incidents have on the attitudes of immigrants towards the majority society in Germany.The findings show that there is a strong relationship between experiences of discrimination and a hostile or alienated attitude towards German society. As an attempt to explain this generalization from single incidents to the macro relation between immigrants and autochthonous Germans in general a theory of framing, taken from developments in the field of rational choice theory, is applied. The reasoning is that a generalizing and rather hostile framing in terms of the attitude towards Germans can minimize psychic, emotional and social costs resulting from acts of discrimination. |
Identificador |
urn:nbn:de:0070-ijcv-2007120 |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Direitos |
DPPL |
Fonte |
International Journal of Conflict and Violence ; 1 , 1 |