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  1. Dec 2025
    1. Furthermore, it is important to help the public understand immigrants do not have to give up the core of their identity

      It recalls me about Asagai and Benethea in ARITS because they are also struggling with their identity

    2. Source: georgephoto/Pixabay With the recent mass shooting in Germany, some people are again asking why anybody would hate refugees and aliens (i.e. foreigners). If you are an immigrant, particularly a recent refugee or asylum seeker, you may have already asked this question many times after having experienced prejudice, racism, and discrimination. If you are among those who hate refugees, do you know why you feel this way? Is it a vague feeling of hostility or does it stem from specific unpleasant experiences or future worries? For instance, do you worry about foreigners spreading diseases, committing violence, or taking away jobs and depressing wages? In this post, I discuss new research by Helen Landmann and colleagues in Germany, which has examined the reasons people use to justify anti-refugee hostility. The study’s findings are published in the December 2019 issue of the European Journal of Social Psychology.1 Why do we find immigrants threatening? Whether the threat is true or imagined, immigrants might be perceived as threatening in a number of ways. Refugees, for instance, pose an economic threat because they need jobs, low-cost housing, access to health care, etc. In addition, they pose a health threat because some refugees come from countries with comparably higher rates of certain diseases (e.g., tuberculosis, AIDS). Furthermore, immigrants pose an identity threat, especially if they have a “different cultural identity, religious identity, and value system than members of the host community.” Perceptions of threat, according to previous research, “are one of the most important predictors of attitudes and prejudice toward immigrants and other outgroups”(p. 82).2 Six reasons for hostility toward refugees Landmann and colleagues in Germany conducted a series of four related studies to examine hostility toward refugees. In the first of these investigations, they used a sample of 55 male and 121 female psychology students (average age of 32 years). The participants were initially asked how many refugees Germany could host per year and then asked what would happen if this number was exceeded. Six threat types emerged from the analysis of the responses:1 Symbolic threat (the migrants’ culture and religion being threatening to one’s way of life) Realistic threat (job availability and pay) Safety threat (immigrants committing crimes) Social functioning threat (the creation of ghettos) Prejudice threat (the potential rise of racist and right-wing views) Altruistic threat (the host nation failing to provide needed support for refugees) article continues after advertisement While the first three threats may be considered direct threats, the other three are extended threats. For example, a person who fears he might catch a deadly disease from refugees is reacting to a direct threat, but a person who fears negative changes in politics of the country, such as a significant increase in popular support for extremist right-wing and far-right parties, is reacting to an indirect or extended threat. Examining these six threat types, researchers tried to determine if only one or two of them might explain hostility toward refugees just as well or even better than all six factors combined. To answer this question, they conducted a second study using a sample of 289 female and 118 male students (average age of 32 years). They concluded that the six threat types explained the data better than one general threat factor or two factors (i.e. symbolic and realistic). In addition, they found that every threat type—even altruistic threat (concerns about the host country’s ability to care for refugees)—was linked with negative views of immigration and refugees. A third study, a replication of the second study, included a sample of 23 male and 108 female students (average age of 33 years) and concluded that, aside from the prejudice threat, every threat type was associated with unfavorable attitudes toward migrants. Bias Essential Reads When the Brain Shapes Belief Racism Is Not Innate Study 4 used a more representative sample, consisting of 111 women and 140 men (mean age of 50 years). Compared to college students in previous samples, these participants reported perceiving even stronger threats and experiencing more hostility toward refugees. And the results again showed support for the six threat types. Every threat type was correlated with unfavorable views of migration and refugees and with favoring more restrictive control of migration. article continues after advertisement Both direct and indirect threats were related to unfavorable attitudes toward refugees,

      This is relevant to the text because in "The Wretched and The Beautiful", human's different attitudes toward two groups of aliens contribute to different threats that alien met.

    3. Symbolic threat (the migrants’ culture and religion being threatening to one’s way of life)

      This remind me some Indian immigrant workers in Russia who could not recognize the size of screws cause some dangerous accidents in industires