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Attitudes Towards Immigrants in Georgia: Myths of Tolerance and Empirical Evidence

[journal article]

Chumburidze, Mariam
Zurabishvili, Tinatin
Zurabishvili, Tamar

Abstract

This paper is based on CRRC's 2015 Caucasus Barometer survey findings and analyzes attitudes reported by the population of Georgia towards immigrants. The authors argue that behind the manifested tolerance, there is empirical evidence of rather ambivalent attitudes towards immigrants. Immigration is... view more

This paper is based on CRRC's 2015 Caucasus Barometer survey findings and analyzes attitudes reported by the population of Georgia towards immigrants. The authors argue that behind the manifested tolerance, there is empirical evidence of rather ambivalent attitudes towards immigrants. Immigration is becoming increasingly visible in Georgia's social, economic and cultural life, and attitudes towards immigrants may serve as a proxy for attitudes towards "others" in general. Specifically, negative attitudes towards immigrants may indicate a specific manifestation of a deeper fear of "others". As little academic or policy work has been done in this direction in Georgia, the conclusions the authors derive, beyond their academic importance, may have highly important practical policy implications, as they may help to shape policies addressing tolerance among the population of Georgia in general.... view less

Classification
Migration, Sociology of Migration

Free Keywords
Georgia; Tolerance; Immigrants

Document language
English

Publication Year
2016

Page/Pages
p. 16-19

Journal
Caucasus Analytical Digest (2016) 85

ISSN
1867-9323

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0


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