TY - JOUR
T1 - Anti-immigration conspiracy beliefs are associated with endorsement of conventional and violent actions opposing immigration and attitudes towards democracy across 21 countries
AU - Thomas, Emma F.
AU - Stothard, Christina
AU - Besta, Tomasz
AU - Akbas, Gulcin
AU - Becker, Julia C.
AU - Becker, Maja
AU - Brik, Tymofii
AU - Chayinska, Maria
AU - Deguchi, Makiko
AU - Dhakal, Sandesh
AU - Kelmendi, Kaltrina
AU - Kende, Anna
AU - de Lemus, Soledad
AU - Le Dornat, Paul
AU - Iwanoska, Magdalena
AU - Leung, Angela
AU - Martiny, Sarah
AU - Mizuki, Rie
AU - Osborne, Danny
AU - Palace, Marek
AU - Pozzi, Maura
AU - Pistoni, Carlo
AU - Raja Reza Shah, Raja Intan Arifah Binti
AU - Raut, Pravash Kumar
AU - Safdar, Saba
AU - Stroebe, Katherine
AU - Sulejmanović, Dijana
AU - Tee, Eugene Y. J.
AU - Ton, Gonneke
AU - Ulug, Ozden Melis
AU - Urbiola, Ana
AU - Weber, Nathan
AU - Włodarczyk, Anna
AU - van Zomeren, Martijn
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Despite widespread speculation that conspiracy beliefs foster anti-democratic outcomes, the\r\nempirical 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.\r\nHowever, 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.
AB - Despite widespread speculation that conspiracy beliefs foster anti-democratic outcomes, the\r\nempirical 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.\r\nHowever, 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.
KW - Anti-immigration conspiracy
KW - collective action
KW - Anti-immigration conspiracy
KW - collective action
UR - https://publicatt.unicatt.it/handle/10807/314836
U2 - 10.1038/s44271-025-00246-1
DO - 10.1038/s44271-025-00246-1
M3 - Article
SN - 2731-9121
VL - 3
SP - 1
EP - 12
JO - COMMUNICATIONS PSYCHOLOGY
JF - COMMUNICATIONS PSYCHOLOGY
IS - 1
ER -