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. 2021 Oct 7;16(10):e0257912.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0257912. eCollection 2021.

Why we dehumanize illegal immigrants: A US mixed-methods study

Affiliations

Why we dehumanize illegal immigrants: A US mixed-methods study

David M Markowitz et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

Dehumanization is a topic of significant interest for academia and society at large. Empirical studies often have people rate the evolved nature of outgroups and prior work suggests immigrants are common victims of less-than-human treatment. Despite existing work that suggests who dehumanizes particular outgroups and who is often dehumanized, the extant literature knows less about why people dehumanize outgroups such as immigrants. The current work takes up this opportunity by examining why people dehumanize immigrants said to be illegal and how measurement format affects dehumanization ratings. Participants (N = 672) dehumanized such immigrants more if their ratings were made on a slider versus clicking images of hominids, an effect most pronounced for Republicans. Dehumanization was negatively associated with warmth toward illegal immigrants and the perceived unhappiness felt by illegal immigrants from U.S. immigration policies. Finally, most dehumanization is not entirely blatant but instead, captured by virtuous violence and affect as well, suggesting the many ways that dehumanization can manifest as predicted by theory. This work offers a mechanistic account for why people dehumanize immigrants and addresses how survey measurement artifacts (e.g., clicking on images of hominids vs. using a slider) affect dehumanization rates. We discuss how these data extend dehumanization theory and inform empirical research.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1. Distribution of dehumanization ratings across measurement formats.
This figure is a density plot for Ascent of Man ratings across measurement formats.
Fig 2
Fig 2. Condition by political party interaction.
Political party X condition interaction effect demonstrating that measurement format affects Republicans relative to other political parties. Error bars are 95% confidence intervals.

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