Tweets to Ballots: Refugee Inflows and Natives' Reactions
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Series
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Speaker
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FieldEmpirical Microeconomics
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LocationErasmus University Rotterdam, E building, Kitchen/Lounge E1
Rotterdam -
Date and time
May 22, 2025
11:45 - 12:45
Abstract
We
examine the impact of the opening of refugee reception centers on natives'
social media activity and voting behavior in the Netherlands during the large
and unexpected refugee inflow of 2015-2016. Using over 100 million geocoded
tweets and a difference-in-differences approach, we find a short-lived surge in
refugee salience on social media, accompanied by a decline in expressed support
for refugees and increased discussions about religious minorities, particularly
Islam. Linking social media salience to voting behavior, we analyze detailed
voting data and document a significant rise in anti-immigration voting near
newly established reception centers. This effect diminishes over time and with
distance from the centers. Furthermore, we show that areas with a strong
initial salience response to refugees drive increased support for
anti-immigration parties, while areas with high pre-existing refugee salience
exhibit no such increase in anti-immigration votes. Joint paper with Paul Bose.