Article(electronic)October 20, 2016

International Labor Mobility and the Variety of Democratic Political Institutions

In: International organization, Volume 71, Issue 1, p. 65-95

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Abstract

AbstractUsing a new measure of immigration policy and examining thirty-six advanced industrial countries between 1996 and 2012, we seek to explain systematically the variation in external labor openness among the more advanced democracies as primary destination countries, using a model where the government feels political pressure through both a voter/electoral channel and a special-interests channel. With voters primarily pressing for immigration restrictions and special interest pressure aimed at immigration openness, democratic political institutions—like a parliamentary system and proportional representation voting with greater district magnitude that make governments more responsive to voters and less responsive to special interests—should be associated with less change toward a more open official immigration policy. Our statistical evidence accords with this expectation.

Languages

English

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

ISSN: 1531-5088

DOI

10.1017/s0020818316000266

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