Skip to main navigation Skip to main content Skip to page footer

Journal Article

A Need for Control? Political Trust and Public Preferences For Asylum and Refugee Policy

Authors

  • Jeannett
  • A.-M.
  • Heidland
  • T.
  • Ruhs
  • M.

Publication Date

DOI

10.1017/S1755773923000012

Key Words

Asylum and Refugee Policy

Policy Preferences

Political Trust

Related Topics

Welfare State

Migration

Globalization

European Union & Euro

Emerging Markets & Developing Countries

Europe

Political trust matters for citizens’ policy preferences but existing research has not fully understood how this effect depends on policy design. To advance this research area, we theorise that policy controls that limit or condition its provision can function as safeguards against uncertainty, thereby compensating for a person’s lack of trust in generating support. Focusing on public preferences for asylum and refugee policy, we conduct an original conjoint experiment in eight European countries. We find that individuals with lower levels of trust in European political institutions are less supportive of policies providing unlimited or unconditional protection and more supportive of restrictive policies. We also show that policy design features such as limits and conditions can mitigate perceived uncertainty for individuals who are less trusting in European political institutions. These findings have important implications for the theoretical understanding of how political trust pertains to citizens’ preferences.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Prof. Dr. Tobias Heidland
    Research Director

More Publications

Subject Dossiers

  • View over cargo ship deck with containers

    International Trade

  • Colorful flags of European countires in front of an official EU building.

    Tension within the European Union

  • People demonstrating against war in the Ukraine

    War against Ukraine

Research Center

  • International Development