TY - JOUR
T1 - Ethnic Competition and Opposition to Ethnic Intermarriage in the Netherlands
T2 - A Multi-Level Approach
AU - Tolsma, Jochem
AU - Lubbers, Marcel
AU - Coenders, Marcel
N1 - Relation: http://www.rug.nl/
date_submitted:2009
Rights: University of Groningen
PY - 2008
Y1 - 2008
N2 - This study investigates the relationship between characteristics of the living environment
and antagonistic attitudes towards ethnic out-groups, with a focus on the explanation of
opposition to ethnic intermarriage. Previous studies on the relationship between the living
environment and prejudice-related attitudes used at most a limited set of contextual
characteristics. We investigate to what extent relative group sizes, economic competition,
cultural competition, safety threats, and social cohesion within Dutch municipalities and
neighbourhoods affect antagonistic attitudes once social origin characteristics and other
relevant individual-level characteristics are controlled for. To test hypotheses derived from
Ethnic Competition Theory and Contact Theory, we used data from the Netherlands
Kinship and Panel Survey supplemented with unique aggregate demographic statistics.
The results show that proximity of ethnic out-group members in the municipality reduces
opposition to ethnic heterogamy. However, an increase in the ethnic out-group proportion
is positively related to opposition to ethnic intermarriage. Moreover, at the neighbourhood
level, proximity of ethnic outgroups increases opposition among the lower educated,
whereas it decreases opposition among the higher educated. These findings indicate that
the threat mechanism, the contact mechanism, and selective migration operate at the
same time. Economic competition is the only type of competition that evokes opposition to
ethnic intermarriage.
AB - This study investigates the relationship between characteristics of the living environment
and antagonistic attitudes towards ethnic out-groups, with a focus on the explanation of
opposition to ethnic intermarriage. Previous studies on the relationship between the living
environment and prejudice-related attitudes used at most a limited set of contextual
characteristics. We investigate to what extent relative group sizes, economic competition,
cultural competition, safety threats, and social cohesion within Dutch municipalities and
neighbourhoods affect antagonistic attitudes once social origin characteristics and other
relevant individual-level characteristics are controlled for. To test hypotheses derived from
Ethnic Competition Theory and Contact Theory, we used data from the Netherlands
Kinship and Panel Survey supplemented with unique aggregate demographic statistics.
The results show that proximity of ethnic out-group members in the municipality reduces
opposition to ethnic heterogamy. However, an increase in the ethnic out-group proportion
is positively related to opposition to ethnic intermarriage. Moreover, at the neighbourhood
level, proximity of ethnic outgroups increases opposition among the lower educated,
whereas it decreases opposition among the higher educated. These findings indicate that
the threat mechanism, the contact mechanism, and selective migration operate at the
same time. Economic competition is the only type of competition that evokes opposition to
ethnic intermarriage.
U2 - 10.1093/esr/jcm047
DO - 10.1093/esr/jcm047
M3 - Article
VL - 24
SP - 215
JO - European Sociological Review
JF - European Sociological Review
IS - 2
ER -