分析二代移民在城乡分化中的政治偏好

Analyzing political preferences of second-generation immigrants across the rural–urban divide

Journal of Urban Economics · 2025
被引 4
人大 AABS 3

中文导读

利用2001-2017年22个欧洲国家的数据,研究二代移民在左右政治光谱上的偏好,发现他们显著偏左,尤其在非城市地区,且更积极参与政治活动。

Abstract

This paper analyzes the political preferences of immigrants’ offspring in relation to the rural–urban divide of political preferences in European countries. Using data on individual voting behavior and political preferences in 22 European countries between 2001 and 2017, we analyze whether second-generation immigrants have different preferences on a left–right political spectrum, relative to other natives. We show that they have a significant left-wing preference after controlling for a large set of individual characteristics and origin fixed effects. In spite of their concentration in urban areas, where native residents are also more left-leaning than the average, this difference is not a result of their location, as the difference is particularly strong in non-urban areas. Second-generation immigrants are also more likely to be politically active, to participate in demonstrations or petitions and to exhibit stronger preferences for inequality-reducing government intervention, internationalism and multiculturalism. Growing up with an immigrant father experiencing challenges in his labor market integration seems to be the stronger predictor of the left-wing preference of second-generation.

二代移民政治偏好城乡政治分化左翼倾向欧洲