CEPII, Recherche et Expertise sur l'economie mondiale
The Usual Suspects: Offender Origin, Media Reporting and Natives’ Attitudes Towards Immigration


Sekou Keita
Thomas Renault
Jérôme Valette

 Highlights :
  • How the systematic disclosure of criminals’ origins in the press affects natives’ attitudes towards immigration?
  • Systematically mentioning the origins of criminals increases the relative salience of natives’ criminality and reduces natives’ concerns about immigration.
  • It allows to break the implicit link between immigration and crime.

 Abstract :
This paper analyses whether the systematic disclosure of criminals’ origins in the press affects natives’ attitudes towards immigration. It takes advantage of the unilateral change in reporting policy announced by the German newspaper Sächsische Zeitung in July, 2016. Combining individual-level panel data from the German Socio-Economic Panel from 2014 to 2018 with 402,819 crime-related articles in German newspapers and those newspapers’ market shares, we find that systematically mentioning the origins of criminals increases the relative salience of natives’ criminality and reduces natives’ concerns about immigration, breaking the implicit link between immigration and crime.

 Keywords : Immigration | Crime | Media Bias

 JEL : F22, K42, L82


Related articles and documents :

  • "The Usual Suspects. Offenders' Origin, Media Reporting and Natives' Attitudes Towards Immigration", The Economic Journal

  • CEPII Working Paper
    N°2022-10, October 2022

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     Fields of expertise

    Migrations
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