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Building: A - Faculty of Law, Floor: 4, Room: 401
Tuesday 08:30 - 10:15 CEST (05/09/2023)
This panel examines emotionality, debates on immigration and its implications for political trust. It looks into the impact of anger-driven misinformation on anti-immigration preference; the impact of perceptions of group relative deprivation on radical right support; it examines the impact of far-right parties and acculturative stress among refugees; it studies the rise of right-wing populism and anti-immigration preferences; it investigates how different national class identities affect political trust; and it examines the negative impact of perceived discrimination for immigrants’ political trust.
Title | Details |
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Anger-driven Misinformation about Immigration: A Cross National Examination | View Paper Details |
The road from group relative deprivation to radical right support – a social dominance approach | View Paper Details |
Buffering the Negative Impact of Perceived Discrimination? - The Importance of Neighborhood Characteristics for Immigrants’ Political Trust | View Paper Details |
Far-right parties and Acculturative Stress among Refugees | View Paper Details |
The rise of right-wing populism: a test of three hypotheses about voter support for the AfD in Germany | View Paper Details |