Oshrat Hochman’s research while affiliated with GESIS - Leibniz-Institute for the Social Sciences and other places

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Publications (1)


Ethnic Majority Attitudes toward Jewish and Non-Jewish Migrants in Israel: The Role of Perceptions of Threat, Collective Vulnerability, and Human Values
  • Article

February 2021

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28 Reads

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4 Citations

Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Services

Oshrat Hochman

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We investigate whether the attitudes of the Israeli majority toward migrants reflect the double standard embedded in Israel’s immigration regime, differentiating Jewish from non-Jewish migrants. We compare attitudes toward ethnic migrants (Jews), non-ethnic migrants (non-Jews), and asylum seekers, considering three explanations: values, collective vulnerability, and perceived threat. Our findings show that perceived vulnerability increases threat due to immigration. Values play an important role in predicting opposition to both Jewish and non-ethnic immigrants. Perceptions of threat are more relevant for the explanation of opposition to non-ethnic immigrants than to that of Jewish immigrants. We discuss our findings in light of existing theories.

Citations (1)


... Thus, for example, a Muslim or Christian would be able to enter the country as a repatriate because he/she was married to a Jew. Raijman, 2010;Ariely, 2011;Gorodzeisky, 2013a;Hochman & Hercowitz-Amir, 2017Raijman et al. 2022;. The focus of these studies is on the effect of respondents' characteristics on attitudes towards different migrant groups rather than the effect of the migrants' attributes on these attitudes. ...

Reference:

Who are the immigrants that Israeli Jews prefer? The interplay between reasons for migration, religion, and religiosity
Ethnic Majority Attitudes toward Jewish and Non-Jewish Migrants in Israel: The Role of Perceptions of Threat, Collective Vulnerability, and Human Values
  • Citing Article
  • February 2021

Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Services