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The Past Is Prologue: African American Opinion toward Undocumented Immigration

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 June 2015

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Abstract

Using data from the 2011 Multi-State Survey on Race and Politics (Parker 2011), I ask if African American1 opinion toward undocumented immigration mirrors African American opinion toward immigration from Southern and Eastern Europe in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. I find evidence that contemporary African American opinion does reflect the manner in which a previous generation of African Americans reacted to immigrant newcomers. More specifically, I find that factors associated with past reactions to new immigration, most notably political and economic competition, egalitarianism, the belief that new immigrants are distancing themselves from African Americans, and the belief that restrictive immigration policies were fueled by racism, continue to predict contemporary African American opinion on undocumented immigration. Taken together, I take my findings as evidence that the past may be prologue in accounting for black opinion toward the newest wave of immigration.

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Copyright © Social Science History Association, 2015 
Figure 0

TABLE 1. Percent oppose Dream Act and percent strongly dislike illegal immigrants by race, 2011 MSSRP

Figure 1

TABLE 2. Ordered logistic regression for opposition to Dream Act, 2011 MSSRP

Figure 2

FIGURE 1. Predicted probability of opposition to Dream Act by selected predictors among African Americans, 2011 MSSRP

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TABLE 3. OLS regression for affect for illegal immigrants, 2011 MSSRP