Zuzanna Brunarska

363 posts

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Zuzanna Brunarska

Zuzanna Brunarska

@ZBrunarska

@CMR_Warsaw, @UniWarszawski anti-immigrant attitudes #migration decision-making #Russia #ethnic 🦣 @[email protected] 🦋 https://t.co/XjhAVU0Ls2

Warsaw, Poland Katılım Şubat 2019
282 Takip Edilen367 Takipçiler
Zuzanna Brunarska
Zuzanna Brunarska@ZBrunarska·
Our analysis was based on nationally representative samples from AT, CZ, DE, HU, PL & SK from the 1st wave of Central European Social Survey (CESS).
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Zuzanna Brunarska
Zuzanna Brunarska@ZBrunarska·
An extremely interesting experimental study on how the mismatch of personal characteristics of immigrants with the ingroup and civic and cultural European identity explain immigration attitudes
EJPR journal@EJPRjournal

🆕 🇪🇺 How do different kinds of European identity shape views on immigration? Théoda Woeffray & Fabio Wasserfallen 👀 at civic and cultural European 🇪🇺 #Identity introducing the idea that value congruence between Europeans and immigrants may matter 💭 buff.ly/YXIrK3W

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Zuzanna Brunarska
Zuzanna Brunarska@ZBrunarska·
An interesting paper on the role of individual socio-economic status in driving anti-immigrant attitudes adding ethnic group position into the picture. Worth reading! It’s a pity though that the authors have excluded post-communist countries from their analyses!
Enes Ataç@ienesatac

🚨 New publication: “The Wages of Ethnic Power: Socioeconomic Status, Group Threat, and Anti-Immigrant Attitudes in Western Europe” 🚨 Just published in the International Journal of Comparative Sociology with Charles Seguin and Brandon Gorman. journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.11…

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Zuzanna Brunarska
Zuzanna Brunarska@ZBrunarska·
By providing an empirical case on immobility that does not easily fit into the voluntary/involuntary dichotomy, I argue for the need to look at the immobility outcome through the lens of a continuum of (in)voluntariness, rather than the involuntary-voluntary binary.
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Zuzanna Brunarska
Zuzanna Brunarska@ZBrunarska·
people’s aspirations and capabilities are subject to restrictions imposed on emigration by their own state. To this end, I use family accounts of unrealized emigration from two emigration-restrictive contexts: communist Poland and the USSR. 3/
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