Hating and Mating: How Fears over Mate Competition Shape Violent Hate Crime against Refugees - A lecture by Rafaela Dancygier

   
Summary

Hating and Mating: How Fears over Mate Competition Shape Violent Hate Crime against Refugees - A lecture by Rafaela Dancygier

Description

As the number of refugees rises across the world, anti-refugee violence has become a pressing concern. What explains the incidence and support of such hate crime? Rafaela Dancygier, Associate Professor of Politics and Public Affairs at Princeton University, argues that fears among native men that refugees pose a threat in the competition for female partners is a critical but understudied factor driving hate crime. Employing a new dataset on the incidence of hate crime across Germany, Dancygier demonstrates that hate crime rises where men face disadvantages in local marriage markets. Next, she deploys an original four-wave panel survey to confirm that support for hate crime increases when men fear that the inflow of refugees makes it more difficult to find female partners. Moreover, concern about competing for romantic partners emerges as a more robust predictor than do variables capturing job competition or xenophobia. She concludes that a more complete understanding of hate crime must incorporate marriage markets and mate competition. Moderated by Cathie Jo Martin, Professor of Political Science and Director of the Center for the Study of Europe.

Starts

4:00pm on Friday, April 5th 2019

End Time

5:30pm

URL

http://www.bu.edu/european/news/calendar/?eid=224100

Topics

Alumni, Lectures, Global, Alumni Association

Speaker(s)

Rafaela Dancygier, Cathie Jo Martin

Event Open To

public

Information Phone

617-358-0919

Contact Name

Elizabeth Amrien

Building

Pardee School of Global Studies, 121 Bay State Road (1st floor)

Contact Organization

Center for the Study of Europe

Show Who

yes

Show Contact

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Show Fees

free

 
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