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Samuel D. Schmid

moving researchers forward

Do Inclusive Democracies Need Closed Borders? An Empirical Perspective


Working Paper

This paper develops and tests the most important idea of my dissertation. Two earlier iterations have each won Best Graduate Student Paper Awards at two separate conferences.

Many theorists assume that the openness of immigration regimes and the inclusiveness of citizenship regimes trade off. Yet, there is no consistent empirical evidence for this negative relationship. In this paper, I argue that different levels of immigration-related politicization in democratic elections can explain variation in the relationship between immigration and citizenship regimes across democracies. More specifically, I contend that when elections do not politicize immigration-related issues, immigration and citizenship policies are not correlated because they follow distinct logics. When politicized, however, immigration and citizenship policy-making are driven by a common logic, aligning along the cosmopolitan-nativist dimension of party politics. Therefore, rising levels of politicization should lead to an increasingly positive correlation of immigration regime openness with citizenship regime inclusiveness. I test this hypothesis using quantitative analyses across 23 Western democracies from 1980 to 2018. The results support but also qualify the argument and bear important implications for long-standing normative and empirical debates on national boundary regime making. 

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