Forced Migration, Social Cohesion and Conflict : The 2015 Refugee Inflow in Germany

In 2015, Germany welcomed close to one million asylum seekers and refugees from Syria, Afghanistan, the Western Balkans and elsewhere. Although the country was often praised for its welcome culture, the inflow has spurred a debate about identity, social cohesion and the limits of multiculturalism. This paper analyzes the effect of this inflow on various dimensions of social cohesion. To separate causation from correlation, it exploits the fact that asylum seekers in Germany are allocated to local areas based on an area’s tax revenues and population several years prior. Therefore, the allocation is unrelated to current economic, political or social conditions. Based on survey data as well as data scraped from newspapers, the paper documents two sets of results. First, it finds no effect on self-reported indicators of trust and perceived fairness, and a small negative effect on and attitudes towards immigrants. In contrast, it finds that the refugee inflow led to an increased incidence of anti-immigrant violence that lasted for about two years. This increase is larger in areas with higher unemployment and greater support for right-wing parties.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Albarosa, Emanuele, Elsner, Benjamin
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2022-01
Subjects:REFUGEES, ASYLUM, MIGRATION, SOCIAL COHESION, ANTI-IMMIGRANT VIOLENCE, FORCED DISPLACEMENT,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/830181643248457941/Forced-Migration-Social-Cohesion-and-Conflict-The-2015-Refugee-Inflow-in-Germany
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36914
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spelling dig-okr-10986369142022-02-04T05:10:41Z Forced Migration, Social Cohesion and Conflict : The 2015 Refugee Inflow in Germany Albarosa, Emanuele Elsner, Benjamin REFUGEES ASYLUM MIGRATION SOCIAL COHESION ANTI-IMMIGRANT VIOLENCE FORCED DISPLACEMENT In 2015, Germany welcomed close to one million asylum seekers and refugees from Syria, Afghanistan, the Western Balkans and elsewhere. Although the country was often praised for its welcome culture, the inflow has spurred a debate about identity, social cohesion and the limits of multiculturalism. This paper analyzes the effect of this inflow on various dimensions of social cohesion. To separate causation from correlation, it exploits the fact that asylum seekers in Germany are allocated to local areas based on an area’s tax revenues and population several years prior. Therefore, the allocation is unrelated to current economic, political or social conditions. Based on survey data as well as data scraped from newspapers, the paper documents two sets of results. First, it finds no effect on self-reported indicators of trust and perceived fairness, and a small negative effect on and attitudes towards immigrants. In contrast, it finds that the refugee inflow led to an increased incidence of anti-immigrant violence that lasted for about two years. This increase is larger in areas with higher unemployment and greater support for right-wing parties. 2022-02-03T14:51:41Z 2022-02-03T14:51:41Z 2022-01 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/830181643248457941/Forced-Migration-Social-Cohesion-and-Conflict-The-2015-Refugee-Inflow-in-Germany http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36914 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9913 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Europe and Central Asia Middle East and North Africa South Asia Germany
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic REFUGEES
ASYLUM
MIGRATION
SOCIAL COHESION
ANTI-IMMIGRANT VIOLENCE
FORCED DISPLACEMENT
REFUGEES
ASYLUM
MIGRATION
SOCIAL COHESION
ANTI-IMMIGRANT VIOLENCE
FORCED DISPLACEMENT
spellingShingle REFUGEES
ASYLUM
MIGRATION
SOCIAL COHESION
ANTI-IMMIGRANT VIOLENCE
FORCED DISPLACEMENT
REFUGEES
ASYLUM
MIGRATION
SOCIAL COHESION
ANTI-IMMIGRANT VIOLENCE
FORCED DISPLACEMENT
Albarosa, Emanuele
Elsner, Benjamin
Forced Migration, Social Cohesion and Conflict : The 2015 Refugee Inflow in Germany
description In 2015, Germany welcomed close to one million asylum seekers and refugees from Syria, Afghanistan, the Western Balkans and elsewhere. Although the country was often praised for its welcome culture, the inflow has spurred a debate about identity, social cohesion and the limits of multiculturalism. This paper analyzes the effect of this inflow on various dimensions of social cohesion. To separate causation from correlation, it exploits the fact that asylum seekers in Germany are allocated to local areas based on an area’s tax revenues and population several years prior. Therefore, the allocation is unrelated to current economic, political or social conditions. Based on survey data as well as data scraped from newspapers, the paper documents two sets of results. First, it finds no effect on self-reported indicators of trust and perceived fairness, and a small negative effect on and attitudes towards immigrants. In contrast, it finds that the refugee inflow led to an increased incidence of anti-immigrant violence that lasted for about two years. This increase is larger in areas with higher unemployment and greater support for right-wing parties.
format Working Paper
topic_facet REFUGEES
ASYLUM
MIGRATION
SOCIAL COHESION
ANTI-IMMIGRANT VIOLENCE
FORCED DISPLACEMENT
author Albarosa, Emanuele
Elsner, Benjamin
author_facet Albarosa, Emanuele
Elsner, Benjamin
author_sort Albarosa, Emanuele
title Forced Migration, Social Cohesion and Conflict : The 2015 Refugee Inflow in Germany
title_short Forced Migration, Social Cohesion and Conflict : The 2015 Refugee Inflow in Germany
title_full Forced Migration, Social Cohesion and Conflict : The 2015 Refugee Inflow in Germany
title_fullStr Forced Migration, Social Cohesion and Conflict : The 2015 Refugee Inflow in Germany
title_full_unstemmed Forced Migration, Social Cohesion and Conflict : The 2015 Refugee Inflow in Germany
title_sort forced migration, social cohesion and conflict : the 2015 refugee inflow in germany
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2022-01
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/830181643248457941/Forced-Migration-Social-Cohesion-and-Conflict-The-2015-Refugee-Inflow-in-Germany
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36914
work_keys_str_mv AT albarosaemanuele forcedmigrationsocialcohesionandconflictthe2015refugeeinflowingermany
AT elsnerbenjamin forcedmigrationsocialcohesionandconflictthe2015refugeeinflowingermany
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