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The Outsider : Prejudice and Politics in Italy

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This text combines research methods and analysis to upend many of our assumptions about prejudice.

Noting that hostility toward immigrants has been on the rise throughout Western Europe, Paul Sniderman and his team conduct a study of prejudice in Italy and offer insights applicable to nearly all countries worldwide.

The study of prejudice, they argue, has been both stimulated and limited by tensions among partial theories.

Prejudice and group conflict are said to be rooted in the psychological makeup of individuals, or alternatively, to spring from real competition over material goods or social status, or yet again, to follow in the wake of a quest for identity.

It is the distinctive effort of "The Outsider" to develop a unified theory of prejudice integrating personality, realistic conflict and social identity approaches.Drawing on computer-assisted interviewing, this book focuses on Italy partly because it has experienced two different waves of immigration, from Northern Africa and Eastern Europe, and thus allows one to consider to what extent the colour of immigrants' skin imposes a special burden of prejudice.

Italy is also an apt site for the study of intolerance because of l

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Product Details
Princeton University Press
0691094977 / 9780691094977
Paperback / softback
18/08/2002
United States
English
x, 218 p. : ill.
24 cm
research & professional /academic/professional/technical Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: 2000.
The timing of Sniderman and his colleagues is impeccable: Just as right-wing extremism, driven by xenophobia, reaches the top of the European agenda (and not only in Austria), they bring to fruition this important six-year study of prejudice toward immigrants in Italy. Students of both Europe and of tolerance will be especially interested in the argument that the Left is especially vulnerable to shocks that increase prejudice. -- Robert D. Putnam The Outsider makes a landmark contribution to our understanding of prejudice. Analysts of public opinion, electoral behavior, party competition, and
The timing of Sniderman and his colleagues is impeccable: Just as right-wing extremism, driven by xenophobia, reaches the top of the European agenda (and not only in Austria), they bring to fruition this important six-year study of prejudice toward immigrants in Italy. Students of both Europe and of tolerance will be especially interested in the argument that the Left is especially vulnerable to shocks that increase prejudice. -- Robert D. Putnam The Outsider makes a landmark contribution to our understanding of prejudice. Analysts of public opinion, electoral behavior, party competition, and 1DST Italy, JFFJ Social discrimination & inequality, JFSL Ethnic studies, JPVK Public opinion & polls