To Europe or Not to Europe? Migration and Public Support for Joining the European Union in the Western Balkans
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2020
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Abstract
For decades, countries aspiring to join the European Union (EU) have been linked to it through migration. Yet little is known about how migration affects individual support for joining the EU in prospective member states. We explore the relationship between migration and support for EU accession in the Western Balkans. Using data from the Gallup Balkan Monitor survey, we find that prospective and return migrants, as well as people with relatives abroad, are more likely to vote favorably in a hypothetical EU referendum. At the same time, only people with relatives abroad are more likely to consider EU membership a good thing. Our results suggest that migration affects attitudes toward joining the EU principally through instrumental/utilitarian motives, with channels related to information and cosmopolitanism playing only a minor role. Overall, we show that migration fosters support for joining the EU in migrants’ origin countries and that joining such a supranational institution is likely to foster political and institutional development of migrants’ origin countries.
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5.4 Sociology, 5.7 Social and Economic geography, 1.2. Scientific article included in INT1 or INT2 category journal of ERIH database
Citation
Ivļevs, A & King, R M 2020, 'To Europe or Not to Europe? Migration and Public Support for Joining the European Union in the Western Balkans', International Migration Review, vol. 54, no. 2, pp. 559-584. https://doi.org/10.1177/0197918319844176