The influence of Authoritarianism: Democratic Support among First and Second-Generation Immigrants in Australia

Date

2011

Authors

Pietsch, Juliet
McAllister, Ian

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Conference Organising Committee

Abstract

As liberal democracies tighten membership criteria for citizenship and place greater expectations on new immigrants to adopt liberal values of democracy, this paper examines whether this is necessary if democracy support is determined by other factors other than one�s political background. The paper�s main focus is on the children of immigrants born in authoritarian regimes. While previous research has shown that pre-migration socialization in authoritarian regimes influence immigrants� democratic transition, less is known whether authoritarian values are passed onto children born and educated in established democracies. Given that findings show that immigrants from authoritarian regimes lag behind the rest of the population in terms of support for democracy, this paper seeks to find out whether the influence of education in an established democracy and perceptions of government performance may take precedence over the political values learnt at home as determinants of democratic support. Using the Australian Election Study, these findings highlight the extent of adult migration experiences and evaluations of government performance on democratic support.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Source

Proceedings of APSA Conference 2011: Crisis, Uncertainty and Democracy

Type

Conference paper

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

DOI

Restricted until