Informing realities: research, public opinion, and media reports on migration and integration
Informing realities: research, public opinion, and media reports on migration and integration
This chapter addresses how research and public debate about migration interact with and inform each other, focusing on public perceptions and media coverage as important aspects. Factors including generalized public innumeracy about migration levels, effects of emotions on perceptions, and variation in the perceived credibility of different messengers make communicating information—of which research evidence is an important type—a complex process with multiple points of potential resistance. Meanwhile, the demands and expectations of public users and policy-makers can influence how research happens and the types of questions that are seen to be more meaningful. These interrelationships exist within wider social, political, and economic contexts that, in certain circumstances, are likely to favour some outcomes over others. In total, the chapter argues that the pathway from generating research evidence to impacting public debates is not only uncertain, it is also more complex than is often presumed.
50-65
Allen, William
f0d4731a-81c1-4886-b11c-74dfa412bb97
Blinder, Scott
42d193be-9c71-409c-8908-412f9166ff38
McNeil, Robert
a75706fc-0168-445d-9245-3aacffe22b7c
March 2019
Allen, William
f0d4731a-81c1-4886-b11c-74dfa412bb97
Blinder, Scott
42d193be-9c71-409c-8908-412f9166ff38
McNeil, Robert
a75706fc-0168-445d-9245-3aacffe22b7c
Allen, William, Blinder, Scott and McNeil, Robert
(2019)
Informing realities: research, public opinion, and media reports on migration and integration.
In,
Ruhs, Martin, Tamas, Kristof and Palme, Joakim
(eds.)
Bridging the Gaps: Linking Research to Public Debates and Policy Making on Migration and Integration.
Oxford University Press, .
(doi:10.1093/oso/9780198834557.003.0004).
Record type:
Book Section
Abstract
This chapter addresses how research and public debate about migration interact with and inform each other, focusing on public perceptions and media coverage as important aspects. Factors including generalized public innumeracy about migration levels, effects of emotions on perceptions, and variation in the perceived credibility of different messengers make communicating information—of which research evidence is an important type—a complex process with multiple points of potential resistance. Meanwhile, the demands and expectations of public users and policy-makers can influence how research happens and the types of questions that are seen to be more meaningful. These interrelationships exist within wider social, political, and economic contexts that, in certain circumstances, are likely to favour some outcomes over others. In total, the chapter argues that the pathway from generating research evidence to impacting public debates is not only uncertain, it is also more complex than is often presumed.
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Published date: March 2019
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Local EPrints ID: 500678
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500678
PURE UUID: c971d133-7496-4c07-959b-cdd8e73283a1
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Date deposited: 09 May 2025 16:40
Last modified: 10 May 2025 02:18
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Contributors
Author:
William Allen
Author:
Scott Blinder
Author:
Robert McNeil
Editor:
Martin Ruhs
Editor:
Kristof Tamas
Editor:
Joakim Palme
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