Attitudinal Predictors of Potential Illegal Cross-Border Migration

This paper reports on the relationship between attitudes toward illegal immigrants and illegal immigration, and people's private behavioural intention to immigrate illegally into a foreign country. The research was carried out in 2005, in Bulgaria, a country with a net emigration rate, using a...

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Veröffentlicht in:The open social science journal 2010-05, Vol.3 (1), p.60-67
Hauptverfasser: Ommundsen, Reidar, Veer, Kees van der, Krumov, Krum, Hristova, Plama, Ivanova, Silvia, Ommundsen, Damyana, Larsen, Knud S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper reports on the relationship between attitudes toward illegal immigrants and illegal immigration, and people's private behavioural intention to immigrate illegally into a foreign country. The research was carried out in 2005, in Bulgaria, a country with a net emigration rate, using a sample of 505 undergraduate Bulgarian students (22.5% male; M age = 23.3; SD = 4.8). A pool of 78 items assessed attitudes toward undocumented immigrants and evaluation of illegal migration. These two measures were used to predict potential undocumented immigration. Based on a factor analysis six subscales were identified and labelled: improvement of life, moral evaluation, courage to live, failure experienced in own country, expectations of benefits from illegal migration, and right to immigrate. Results of a multiple regression analysis explained 62 percent of the variance of the behavioural intention to migrate illegally into a foreign country. The analysis yielded the following factors: attitudes to improve life ([beta] = 0.35), the moral evaluation of illegal immigrants ([beta] = -0.26), expectancies of benefits ([beta] = -0.19), the courage of migrants ([beta] = 0.10), and seeing illegal immigration as a right ([beta] = 0.09), These findings support the hypothesis that attitudes may predict potential behaviour, the strongest predictor for undocumented migration being the urge to improve life, and moral evaluation of migrants.
ISSN:1874-9453
1874-9453
DOI:10.2174/1874945301003010060