Demographic Change and Group Boundaries in Germany: The Effect of Projected Demographic Decline on Perceptions of Who Has a Migration Background

In many Western societies, the current "native" majority will become a numerical minority sometime within the next century. How does prospective demographic change affect existing group boundaries? An influential recent article by Abascal (2020) showed that white Americans under demographi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sociological science 2022, Vol.9 (9), p.206-220
Hauptverfasser: Gereke, Johanna, Hellyer, Joshua, Behnert, Jan, Exner, Saskia, Herbel, Alexander, Jäger, Felix, Lajic, Dean, Mezenský, Štepán, Ngoc Anh, Vu, Ogłaza, Tymoteusz, Schabinger, Jule, Sokolova, Anna, Szafran, Daria, Tirolf, Noah, Veit, Susanne, Zhang, Nan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In many Western societies, the current "native" majority will become a numerical minority sometime within the next century. How does prospective demographic change affect existing group boundaries? An influential recent article by Abascal (2020) showed that white Americans under demographic threat reacted with boundary contraction-that is, they were less likely to classify ambiguously white people as "white." The present study examines the generalizability of these findings beyond the American context. Specifically, we test whether informing Germans about the projected decline of the "native" population without migration background affects the classification of phenotypically ambiguous individuals. Our results show that information about demographic change neither affects the definition of group boundaries nor generates negative feelings toward minority outgroups. These findings point to the relevance of contextual differences in shaping the conditions under which demographic change triggers group threat and boundary shifts.
ISSN:2330-6696
2330-6696
DOI:10.15195/v9.a9