Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jn8rn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T14:19:15.517Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Who Should Call for Advocacies? The Influence of Rights Advocates on the Public's Attitude Toward Immigrants’ Voting Rights in Japan

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 June 2022

Akira Igarashi*
Affiliation:
Osaka University, Osaka, Japan
Yoshikuni Ono
Affiliation:
Waseda University, Tokyo, Japan
*
*Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Native allies are critical to the success of immigrants’ social movements in East Asian countries because of their relatively small number. However, it remains unclear whether advocacy messages from natives or from immigrants are more effective in changing natives’ attitudes toward supporting immigrant-oriented policies. We hypothesize, from the perspective of social identity theory, that the persuasiveness of a message varies, depending on the identity of the group sending the message—that is, whether it is an in-group or an out-group. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a survey experiment using the case of granting local voting rights to immigrants in Japan. We found that support for granting local voting rights to immigrants does not decrease when the Japanese hear advocacy messages from the Japanese, however, it does decrease when they hear messages from Korean immigrants who stand to benefit from the granting of local suffrage. These results suggest that natives’ advocacy messages may increase support for immigrants.

Type
Research Note
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the East Asia Institute

Immigrants and racial and ethnic minorities continue to be socioeconomically and politically disadvantaged in many countries (Adida, Laitin, and Valfort Reference Adida, Laitin and Valfort2010; Cascio and Washington Reference Cascio and Washington2014). To change the situation around them, they engage in social movements to interact with politics and question society, as exemplified by the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement for racial equality that emerged in the United States (Szetela Reference Szetela2020). These movements are attempts to influence the host society to improve the socioeconomic and political conditions of immigrants and minorities (Biggs and Andrews Reference Biggs and Andrews2015; Steil and Vasi Reference Steil and Vasi2014).

East Asia is no exception, though it has a much smaller immigrant and ethnic minority population than the United States. In East Asian societies, the key to the success of such social movements might be the presence of allies who are members of majority ethnic groups and natives. Those sympathetic to immigrants organize Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) to support and empower them (Piper Reference Piper2004a, Reference Piper2004b; Shipper Reference Shipper2008) and sometimes speak for them (Steil and Vasi Reference Steil and Vasi2014; Tsuda Reference Tsuda and Takayuki2006; Yamanaka Reference Yamanaka2010). In East Asian countries, NGOs organized by native citizens play an important role in conveying messages about the disadvantaged status of immigrants to other citizens and to local and national governments (e.g., Milly Reference Milly2014; Shipper Reference Shipper2008). However, it is not yet clear which is more effective in the success of such social movements, whether immigrants themselves should take the initiative to speak out and appeal to host societies, or whether allies comprising majority ethnic groups and natives should convey messages of support for immigrants to host societies. For example, Hayduk and Coll (Reference Hayduk and Coll2018, 15) argue that “immigrants are the most credible spokespeople for noncitizen voting rights, and their personal stories about the adverse impacts of disenfranchisement are often the most effective arguments that win over both voters and policy-makers.” Nevertheless, their claims remain theoretical and have not been empirically tested. On the other hand, from the perspective of social identity theory, citizens are expected to be more persuaded by co-ethnic speeches owing to their in-group favoritism (e.g., Barnum and Markovsky Reference Barnum and Markovsky2007; Wyer Reference Wyer2010). Using the controversy over the granting of local-level voting rights to immigrants in Japan as a case, this study examines how the attitudes of natives are affected by whether the advocates of such rights are immigrants themselves or allied citizens.

Prior studies have elucidated that granting suffrage to immigrants without citizenship helps improve their socioeconomic status (Cascio and Washington Reference Cascio and Washington2014; Naidu Reference Naidu2012). Although not all democracies grant suffrage to immigrants, a significant number of countries do grant (local) suffrage to immigrants, including a majority of European countries, parts of the United States and Canada, South Korea, and Hong Kong (Hayduk Reference Hayduk2004; Arrighi and Bauböck Reference Arrighi and Bauböck2017; Mosler and Pedroza, Reference Mosler and Pedroza2016). In contrast, in Japan, second and third generation immigrants, primarily from Korea, have been demanding local electoral suffrage for decades (Tsutsui and Shin Reference Tsutsui and Shin2008), without their claims being successfully legislated. As a result, Japan is often mentioned as a prime example of a country where immigrants’ political rights are restricted (e.g., Earnest Reference Earnest2015). In fact, due to the aging population and the resulting labor shortage, the Japanese government has liberalized its immigration policy to accept more immigrants and extend their stay in Japan. In response to these social changes, the Japanese are faced with a situation where they are reconsidering the acceptance of immigrants and the granting of voting rights. Examining the message-senders that can change Japanese attitudes, which tend to be restrictive and resistant to changes regarding immigrants’ rights, will not only deepen our understanding of the support mechanisms for granting voting rights to immigrants in Japan, but also provide implications for other democracies where immigration is on the rise.

In the following sections, we first provide background on the controversy over the granting of voting rights to immigrants in Japan. We refer to Korean immigrants, who have received the most attention on the issue of granting local election suffrage to permanent residents, and to the movements of NGOs. Thereafter, we review the literature on social identity theory of inter-group relations and discuss the possible senders of advocacy messages that might effectively lead immigrant social movements to success, that is, to change natives’ attitudes toward granting voting rights to immigrants. Specifically, from a social identity perspective, we expect to see less support for granting local suffrage to immigrants when the Japanese receive advocacy messages from immigrants. We tested this through a vignette survey experiment to specify if there are heterogeneous effects across respondents. The results reveal that, in accordance with the hypothesis, there is more support for the granting of suffrage when the advocacy message is issued by the Japanese compared with when the message is issued by out-group members, especially Koreans. Such an effect is more pronounced for those with higher levels of in-group favoritism.

Japanese context

Before introducing the theories and hypotheses, we briefly describe the immigration situation in Japan as a case to test the above argument and aid the reader in understanding the Japanese context. As of 2018, Japan had 2.73 million residents with foreign roots (Ministry of Justice 2019), accounting for 2.16% of the total population. Although this percentage is small compared with North American and Western European countries, it represents the largest number of immigrants in Japan's history.

Despite the growing number of immigrants, the Japanese government provides inadequate rights to immigrants in several areas (Solano and Huddleston Reference Solano and Huddleston2020). Specifically, local suffrage is not granted to immigrants or non-citizens, which distinguishes Japan from other democracies (Earnest Reference Earnest2015; Arrighi and Bauböck Reference Arrighi and Bauböck2017). In 1995, in a case where Korean residents in Japan sought voting rights in local elections, the Supreme Court ruled that “granting local voting rights did not violate the Constitution and the parliament can enact a statute without amending the Constitution” (Kondo Reference Kondo2002: 420). Since this Supreme Court decision was made, the Japanese government has discussed the possibility of granting local voting rights to foreign residents, but it has yet to do so (see Day Reference Day2009 and Kalicki Reference Kalicki2008 for reviews of the political debate). The ruling party, especially the conservative Liberal Democratic Party, has been reluctant to introduce voting rights because of the small number of potential voters who would support the party and the small political payoff (Chung Reference Chung2010). Furthermore, there is strong opposition among the conservative Japanese to granting local voting rights to foreigners for fear that immigrants will vote for their own politicians and control local governments (Higuchi Reference Higuchi2014). This political situation makes it difficult for immigrants to participate in elections, especially at the local level.

Koreans and their descendants (called Zainichi Koreans) who came to Japan between 1910 and 1945, when Japan was colonizing Korea, have been active in collective actions for political rights (Gurowitz Reference Gurowitz1999; Tsutsui and Shin Reference Tsutsui and Shin2008). They have been successful in some areas, such as social welfare (Chung Reference Chung2010), but they have not had much success in obtaining political rights (Tsutsui and Shin Reference Tsutsui and Shin2008). Despite the fact that political empowerment of immigrants remains an issue, activism among Zainichi Koreans has been declining for decades (Yamawaki Reference Yamawaki and Kajika2001; Motomori and Sakaguchi Reference Motomori and Sakaguchi2020).

Moreover, NGOs organized by Japanese citizens play an important role in attempts to expand immigrant rights (Shipper Reference Shipper2008; Tsuda Reference Tsuda and Takayuki2006). These organizations address not only political rights, but also diverse other issues, including 1) immigration control system (that is, visas, asylum, and detention centers), 2) legal and procedural rights and protections, 3) labor protection and employee-related policies, and 4) social issues (Milly Reference Milly and Tsuda2006). NGOs, sometimes in cooperation with ethnic and Zainichi Korean organizations, seek to address these issues through lobbying local and national governments, legal action, and mobilization of people (e.g., Shipper Reference Shipper2008).

Social identity theory of inter-group relationships

According to social identity theory, when social categorization is salient, people seek similarity with members of the in-group (that is, the group they identify with) and seek to differentiate themselves from those of the out-group (that is, the group they do not identify with) (Hornsey Reference Hornsey2008; Tajfel Reference Tajfel1982; Tajfel and Turner Reference Tajfel, Turner, Austin and Worchel1979). People tend to evaluate their own group (that is, the in-group) and in-group members positively, to maintain a positive self-concept and for their self-evaluation and self-esteem. This creates “in-group favoritism,” a positive evaluation and treatment of in-group members. However, a person's evaluation of an in-group is relative: people evaluate one group in comparison with another. Consequently, members of the in-group tend to evaluate the out-group and its members negatively to form a favorable in-group image. An example of this out-group derogation is the negative attitude of natives with a strong in-group identity toward the out-group, the immigrants (Aboud Reference Aboud2003; Raijman, Davidov, Schmidt, and Hochman 2008; Verkuyten Reference Verkuyten2009).

Positive evaluations of in-group members lead to a higher level of trust in them; conversely, in-group members are less likely to trust out-group members (Dovidio, Gaertner, Kawakami, and Hodson Reference Dovidio, Gaertner, Kawakami and Hodson2002; Voci Reference Voci2006). Therefore, compared with messages from out-group members, those from in-group members are more likely to attract the attention of in-group members and are more persuasive (Barnum and Markovsky Reference Barnum and Markovsky2007; Mackie, Gastardo-Conaco, and Skelly Reference Mackie, Gastardo-Conaco and Skelly1992; Nelson and Garst Reference Nelson and Garst2005; Wyer Reference Wyer2010). Indeed, prior research on the BLM movement has revealed that White respondents tend to respond positively to appeals from co-racial individuals (Arora and Stout Reference Arora and Stout2019). Applying these arguments to opinion formation, we would expect messages from in-group members to be more influential in changing people's attitudes than those from out-group members.

Hypotheses

Who is best suited to convincing Japanese citizens to support suffrage for immigrants: Japanese citizens or immigrants themselves? Based on social identity theory, we expect the voices of Japanese citizens to be more persuasive. Natives tend to avoid situations in which the out-group threatens the resources or power they possess (Blumer Reference Blumer1958; Raijman et al. Reference Raijman, Davidov, Schmidt and Hochman2008). If in-group members are advocates, the Japanese people may trust their message; in contrast, if out-group members are advocates, they may be perceived by Japanese citizens as seeking to exploit the political resources of their citizens. Therefore, through the mechanism of favoritism toward the in-group and contempt for the out-group, Japanese respondents are likely to find the message from the in-group more persuasive than the message from the out-group (immigrants). This leads to Hypothesis 1:

H1: Japanese respondents are more supportive of granting local suffrage to foreign residents when they hear advocacy messages from Japanese citizens rather than immigrants.

Furthermore, we expect that there could be heterogeneous effects among Japanese respondents. If social identity theory is correct, the Japanese with a stronger sense of belonging to Japan or a greater degree of Japanese nationalism may be more effectively persuaded by advocacy messages from their fellow Japanese than immigrants. Thus, we formulate Hypothesis 2 as follows:

H2: Japanese respondents with a high degree of nationalist feeling are more supportive of granting local suffrage to foreign residents when they hear advocacy messages from Japanese citizens rather than immigrants.

The effects of the in-group/out-group distinction on support for granting voting rights may also depend on which ethnic group members within the immigrant population deliver the advocacy message. Social identity theory relies on the saliency of group boundaries. Therefore, when in-group members perceive stronger group boundaries, they feel a greater need to emphasize their differences from the out-group, thus reinforcing their favoritism toward the in-group and contempt for the out-group (Alba Reference Alba2005).

Given that Zainichi Koreans have launched multiple social movements for the right to vote (Tsutsui and Shin Reference Tsutsui and Shin2008), Japanese people may feel strong group boundaries with Korean immigrants.Footnote 1 Owing to their frequency, Zainichi Koreans’ claims are likely to receive the most political attention. In other words, the social movement for local suffrage for Zainichi Koreans may function as a strong awareness of the categorization of Japanese and Koreans. Therefore, we focus on the difference in the effects of Zainichi Koreans’ claims and those of other ethnic groups.

Japanese perceive local suffrage claims as primarily made by Zainichi Koreans rather than other immigrants, making Korean immigrants politically salient (Higuchi Reference Higuchi2014). When Japanese people receive messages about local suffrage from Zainichi Koreans, their sense of group boundaries may be reinforced, and in-group favoritism and out-group contempt is likely to be intensified. Consequently, we expect that Zainichi Koreans’ arguments will reduce Japanese support for local suffrage more than those of other immigrants. Thus, for H1 and H2, the Korean immigrant advocacy message is expected to have a stronger effect. This is presented below as Hypotheses 3a and 3b.

H3a: Japanese respondents are more supportive of granting local suffrage to immigrants when exposed to advocacy messages from Japanese citizens than Koreans.

H3b: Japanese respondents with a greater degree of nationalist feeling are more supportive of granting local suffrage to immigrants when exposed to advocacy messages from Japanese citizens than Koreans.

Research design

To test these hypotheses, we conducted a vignette survey experiment in April 2021 with respondents registered with Rakuten Insight, Inc., one of Japan's largest web-based survey companies. Of the panel registrants, only those with Japanese citizenship were selected as respondents. We also selected respondents based on gender, age, and region of residence to be representative of the Japanese census population. Excluding those who were not sufficiently attentive to the survey and those who did not answer the manipulation check questions correctly, the total number of valid respondents was 3,400.Footnote 2

For the vignette, we created a hypothetical story in which the current situation regarding local suffrage for non-Japanese residents is briefly described and an activist commented on it. Here, we manipulated the nationality of the activist to be Japanese, Korean, or Finnish. Hence, the experiment comprised three conditions: one majority ethnicity condition and two minority ethnicity conditions. The Japanese condition is used as a reference. Koreans are the most salient immigrant group in Japan, whereas the Finnish represent the least salient immigrant group (e.g., Kashiwazaki Reference Kashiwazaki2013). The comment section manipulated in the vignette is as follows (see Appendix II for Japanese text):

[Takashi Igarashi, a member of a foreigner support NGO/Kim Soo-hyun, a South Korean/Daniel Niina, a Finnish], 52 years old, who has lived in Osaka for many years, said, “Foreigners living in Japan, even those who have graduated from Japanese schools, speak Japanese, and are familiar with the Japanese culture, are not even able to participate in local elections. Foreign residents are placed in a particularly difficult socioeconomic position that is directly affected by politics. We need to appeal more to politics to change this situation.”

Respondents were randomly assigned one of the conditions and asked to rate on a 5-point scale whether they agree or disagree with granting local suffrage to foreign residents in Japan after reading the story.Footnote 3 To test H1, we combined the Korean and Finnish conditions into one category and analyzed as a dichotomous treatment variable: the Japanese versus immigrant spokesperson. Thereafter, we tested how the effects of the Japanese and Korean treatments differed using the original treatment variable (H3a).

To examine the effects of nationalism (H2 and H3b), we measured respondents’ degree of nationalism on a 6-point scale with the following four items: “I would rather be a citizen of Japan than of any other country in the world,” “The world would be a better place if people in other countries were more like the Japanese,” “Generally speaking, Japan is a better country than most other countries,” and “I am proud to be Japanese.” We combined these variables and performed a factor analysis to create a factor score.Footnote 4 We also asked the respondents, other demographic questions such as age, gender, education, and region of residence. In addition, we asked about political ideologies (conservative or liberal). To ensure robustness, we included these in the analysis as control variables and the results were the same regardless of whether these variables were included or not.

Results

First, we tested the effects of the in-group and out-group status of the spokesperson. The results are shown in Table 1, Model 1. As indicated, respondents’ attitudes did not change depending on whether they heard the advocacy message from a Japanese or non-Japanese spokesperson. Thus, H1 was not supported. Furthermore, we divided respondents according to their level of nationalism, however, there was no significant effect between respondents with high and low levels of nationalism (see Appendix I for results). Based on these results, H2 was also not supported.

Table 1. Support for the granting of local suffrage to foreign residents

*p < .05, **p < .01, ***p < .001

Next, we de-categorized the immigrant treatment into the Korean and Finnish conditions to examine the heterogeneous effects of nationality. We found that significantly fewer respondents in the Korean condition supported granting local suffrage to immigrants than in the Japanese condition, while there was no significant difference in responses between the Japanese and Finnish conditions. These results support H3a and suggest that Japanese respondents are concerned about the nationality of the spokesperson and react negatively to advocacy messages from the most prominent immigrant group, Zainichi Koreans. Therefore, Japanese citizens do not increase their support for voting rights when they hear advocacy messages from some immigrants, indicating that social identity theory is a plausible explanation for this.

The results presented in Model 2 partially support in-group favoritism and out-group contempt, indicating that messages from Japanese individuals may change respondents’ attitudes more favorably than messages from Korean immigrants. To test whether there are heterogeneous effects across levels of nationalist sentiment among Japanese respondents (H3b), we followed the approach of previous studies (e.g., Hainmueller and Hopkins Reference Hainmueller and Hopkins2015) and divided respondents into those with high levels of nationalism (defined as having nationalism scores equal to or higher than average) and those with low levels of nationalism (defined as having nationalism scores lower than average). If in-group preferences are functioning, those with high nationalism should react negatively to advocacy messages from Koreans.

Table 2 shows the results, which indicate that only respondents with high nationalism reacted negatively to the Korean condition. This result supports the assumption regarding in-group favoritism that only those with strong attachment to the in-group react negatively to the claims of the out-group. In addition, to see the robustness of the results, we also divided respondents by demographic variables (age, gender, and education) and ideology, however, the results varied only with the nationalism variable. This robustness check supports that the Japanese public responds to in-group categorizations and not to other potential cues.

Table 2. Support for the granting of local suffrage to foreign residents by respondents’ level of nationalism

*p < .05, **p < .01, ***p < .001. The same control variables as those in Table 1 are included but not presented in the table.

Conclusion

The purpose of this study is to identify who should advocate for the rights of immigrants. Previous studies have assumed that immigrants are most effective at eliciting support from natives (Hayduk and Coll Reference Hayduk and Coll2018); however, to the best of our knowledge, this assumption has not been empirically tested to date. These issues are particularly relevant to East Asian countries, where immigrant populations are smaller than in Western societies, and the support of natives is essential for successful social movements to secure immigrant rights (Shipper Reference Shipper2008).

Employing the case of local suffrage, a major political issue for immigrants in Japan, we experimentally examined whose claims are more important for Japanese citizens to support local suffrage for immigrants. From the perspective of social identity theory, we expected that Japanese citizens would prefer the advocacy messages of in-groups to those of out-groups. Furthermore, we expected that the influence of ethnic groups would be heterogeneous and that mechanisms of social identity would apply particularly to the claims of Koreans, who are prominent in social movements for local suffrage.

The results did not fully support our expectations from social identity theory. However, we found that advocacy by a Japanese person or Finnish immigrant had no effect on Japanese respondents’ attitudes toward local suffrage for immigrants, while advocacy by a Korean immigrant had a negative effect. Thus, consistent with the social identity theory, Japanese citizens were revealed to be less likely to support local suffrage for immigrants when it was advocated by a Korean immigrant than when it was advocated by a Japanese.

The reason why a Korean immigrant spokesperson has had a negative effect on Japanese support for local suffrage may be found in the history of Korean immigrants’ efforts to achieve local suffrage. Social movements calling for local suffrage for foreigners often originate from Zainichi Koreans, not Japanese citizens. The assertion of rights by Zainichi Koreans may have generated a backlash against the granting of local suffrage. Japanese people who receive messages from Korean immigrants become more aware of the group boundary between the two ethnic groups; and because of this boundary, the Japanese may not support local suffrage for immigrants. In support of these arguments, only respondents with high levels of nationalism, one indicator of the strength of group boundaries, did not support local suffrage.

Finally, we believe that socially meaningful implications emerged from this study, but there are several limitations that future research must overcome. First, this study used two groups of immigrants: the Koreans and Finnish living in Japan. We restricted the number of immigrant nationalities to increase statistical power. Consequently, the response of Japanese citizens to advocacy messages by other foreign residents remains unexplored. Since Zainichi Koreans are the most salient group regarding local suffrage, we think advocacy by members of other ethnic groups is unlikely to exacerbate Japanese attitudes toward the granting of voting rights. To test this, future research could increase the number of immigrant nationalities and observe how Japanese citizens respond. Second, we examined the most politically important issue for immigrants in Japan: the right to vote. However, since the right to vote is associated with exclusive membership, the Japanese responses to other rights may differ from those observed in this study. Future research could comprehensively examine support for immigrants’ rights while varying the nationalities of rights advocates and the types of rights they support.

Supplementary Material

The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/jea.2022.11.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare none.

Footnotes

1. Since most Zainichi Koreans are born and raised in the Japanese society, some may doubt that a clear boundary exists between Zainichi Koreans and Japanese. However, it has been experimentally illustrated that having Japanese ancestry is seen by the Japanese as an important factor for a person to be Japanese (Ishida Reference Ishida2016). Hence, although Zainichi Koreans are members of the Japanese society, the Japanese citizens can be said to draw a clear boundary between themselves and Zainichi Koreans.

2. Some might question this study's external validity because it relied on a web-based survey, which is not representative of random sampling. Using a random sampling method would have been ideal, even though our sample was collected close to the distribution of the census population. However, some studies have found no difference in experimental results between representative samples and opt-in web surveys (Coppock, Leeper, and Mullinix Reference Coppock, Leeper and Mullinix2018). Therefore, the results of our experiment may not significantly differ from those of an experiment conducted in a representative survey.

3. We conducted a balance test by running a multinomial regression with the assigned experimental condition as the dependent variable and the respondent's age, gender, education, region of residence, ideology, and nationalism as the independent variables. We did not find any statistically significant outcomes, which verify that the randomization was successfully made across groups.

4. We specifically used principal factor solution and promax rotation to generate a measure of nationalism. Factor loadings of these variables are .786, .780, .604, and .706, respectively.

References

Aboud, Frances E. 2003. “The Formation of In-Group Favoritism and Out-Group Prejudice in Young Children: Are They Distinct Attitudes?.” Developmental Psychology 39 (1): 4860.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Adida, Claire L., Laitin, David D., and Valfort, Marie-Anne. 2010Identifying Barriers to Muslim Integration in France.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 107 (52): 2238422390.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Alba, Richard. 2005Bright vs. Blurred Boundaries: Second-Generation Assimilation and Exclusion in France, Germany, and the United States.” Ethnic and Racial Studies 28 (1): 2049.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arora, Maneesh, and Stout, Christopher T.. 2019. “Letters for Black Lives: Co-Ethnic Mobilization and Support for the Black Lives Matter Movement.” Political Research Quarterly 72 (2): 389402.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arrighi, Jean-Thomas, and Bauböck, Rainer. 2017. “A Multilevel Puzzle: Migrants’ Voting Rights in National and Local Elections.” European Journal of Political Research 56 (3): 619–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barnum, Christopher, and Markovsky, Barry N.. 2007. “Group Membership and Social Influence.” Current Research in Social Psychology 13 (3): 122.Google Scholar
Biggs, Michael, and Andrews, Kenneth T.. 2015. “Protest Campaigns and Movement Success: Desegregating the US South in the Early 1960s.” American Sociological Review 80 (2): 416–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blumer, Herbert. 1958. “Race Prejudice as a Sense of Group Position.” Pacific Sociological Review 1 (1), 37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cascio, Elizabeth U., and Washington, Ebonya. 2014. “Valuing the Vote: The Redistribution of Voting Rights and State Funds Following The Voting Rights Act of 1965.” The Quarterly Journal of Economics 129 (1): 379433.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chung, Erin A. 2010. Immigration and Citizenship in Japan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coppock, Alexander, Leeper, Thomas J., and Mullinix, Kevin J.. 2018. Generalizability of Heterogeneous Treatment Effect Estimates Across Samples.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 115 (49): 1244112446.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Day, Stephen. 2009. “Japan: The Contested Boundaries of Alien Suffrage at the Local Level.” Democratization 16 (3): 558584.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dovidio, John F., Gaertner, Samuel E., Kawakami, Kerry, and Hodson, Gordon. 2002. “Why Can't We Just Get Along? Interpersonal Biases and Interracial Distrust.” Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology 8 (2): 88102.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Earnest, David C. 2015. “Expanding the Electorate: Comparing the Noncitizen Voting Practices of 25 democracies.” Journal of International Migration and Integration 16 (1): 125.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gurowitz, Amy. 1999. “Mobilizing International Norms: Domestic Actors, Immigrants, and the Japanese State.” World Politics 51 (3): 413-445.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hainmueller, Jens, and Hopkins, Daniel J.. 2015. “The Hidden American Immigration Consensus: A Conjoint Analysis of Attitudes Toward Immigrants.” American Journal of Political Science 59 (3): 529–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayduk, Ronald. 2004. “Democracy for All: Restoring Immigrant Voting Rights in the US.” New Political Science 26 (4): 499523.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayduk, Ronald, and Coll, Kathleen. 2018. “Urban Citizenship: Campaigns to Restore Immigrant Voting Rights in the US.” New Political Science 40 (2): 336-352.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Higuchi, Naoto. 2014. Nihongata Haigaishugi: Zaitokukai, Gaikokujin sanseiken, Higasiajia chiseigaku [Japanese exclusionism: Zaitokukai, foreign suffrage, and East Asia geopolitics]. Nagoya: Nayoya Daigaku Shuppankai.Google Scholar
Hornsey, Matthew J. 2008. “Social Identity Theory and Self-Categorization Theory: A Historical Review.” Social and Personality Psychology Compass 2 (1): 204–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ishida, Atsushi. 2016. “Nihonjinno Jouken” [Imagined conditions of the “Japanese”]. Japanese Sociological Review 67 (2): 182200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kalicki, Konrad. 2008. “Voting Rights of the ‘Marginal’: The Contested Logic of Political Membership in Japan.” Ethnopolitics 7 (2): 265–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kashiwazaki, Chikako. 2013. “Incorporating Immigrants as foreigners: Multicultural Politics in Japan.” Citizenship Studies 17 (1): 3147.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kondo, Atsushi. 2002. “The Development of Immigration Policy in Japan.” Asian and Pacific Migration Journal 11 (4): 415–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mackie, Diane M., Gastardo-Conaco, M. Cecilia, and Skelly, John J.. 1992. “Knowledge of the Advocated Position and the Processing of In-Group and Out-Group Persuasive Messages.” Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 18 (2): 145–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Milly, Deborah J. 2006. “Policy Advocacy for Foreign Residents in Japan.” In Local Citizenship in Recent Countries of Immigration: Japan in Comparative Perspective, edited by Tsuda, Takeyuki, 123-151. Maryland: Lexington Books.Google Scholar
Milly, Deborah J. 2014. New Policies for New Residents: Immigrants, Advocacy, and Governance in Japan and Beyond. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Mosler, Hannes B., and Pedroza, Luicy. 2016. “An Unexpected Pioneer in Asia: The Enfranchisement of Foreign Residents in South Korea.” Ethnopolitics 15 (2): 187210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Motomori, Eriko, and Sakaguchi, Midori. 2020. “Kawasakishiniokeru Zainichikankokujinshisakuto Chiikijisen: Tabunkakyoseino Senshinchiikino Naritachitogenzai” [A short history of city administration and social movement for foreign residents in Kawasaki, a multicultural society: How change happened, who made it happen and what happened next]. Bulletin of Institute of Sociology and Social Work, Meiji Gakuin University, 50: 167183.Google Scholar
Naidu, Suresh. 2012. “Suffrage, Schooling, and Sorting in the Post-Bellum US South.” National Bureau of Economic Research, No. w18129.Google Scholar
Nelson, Thomas E., and Garst, Jennifer. 2005. “Values-Based Political Messages and Persuasion: Relationships Among Speaker, Recipient, and Evoked Values.” Political Psychology 26 (4): 489516.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Piper, Nicola. 2004a. “Gender and Migration Policies in Southeast and East Asia: Legal Protection and Sociocultural Empowerment of Unskilled Migrant Women.” Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography 25 (2): 216–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Piper, Nicola. 2004b. “Rights of Foreign Workers and the Politics of Migration in South-East and East Asia.” International Migration 42 (5): 7197.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raijman, Rebeca, Davidov, Eldad, Schmidt, Peter, and Hochman, Oshrat. 2008. “What Does a Nation Owe Non-Citizens? National Attachments, Perception of Threat and Attitudes Towards Granting Citizenship Rights in a Comparative Perspective.” International Journal of Comparative Sociology 49 (2): 195220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shipper, Apichai W. (2008). Fighting for Foreigners: Immigration and its Impact on Japanese Democracy. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Solano, Giacomo and Huddleston, Thomas. 2020. Migrant Integration Policy Index 2020. Retrieved from www.mipex.eu/anti-discrimination. Accessed February 16, 2021.Google Scholar
Steil, Justin Peter, and Vasi, Ion Bogdan. 2014. “The New Immigration Contestation: Social Movements and Local Immigration Policy Making in the United States, 2000–2011.” American Journal of Sociology 119 (4): 11041155.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Szetela, Adam. 2020. “Black Lives Matter at Five: Limits and Possibilities.” Ethnic and Racial Studies 43 (8): 13581383.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tajfel, Henri. 1982. Social Identity and Intergroup Relations. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tajfel, Henri, and Turner, John C. 1979. “An Integrative Theory of Intergroup Conflict.” In The Social Psychology of Intergroup Relations, edited by Austin, W. G., and Worchel, S., 3347. Monterey: Brooks/Cole.Google Scholar
Tsuda, Takeyuki. 2006. “The Limits of Local Citizenship and Activism in Japan and Other Recent Countries of Immigration.” In Local Citizenship in Recent Countries of Immigration: Japan in Comparative Perspective, edited by Takayuki, Tsuda, 273–93. Lanham: Lexington Books.Google Scholar
Tsutsui, Kiyoteru, and Shin, Hwa Ji. 2008. “Global Norms, Local Activism, and Social Movement Outcomes: Global Human Rights and Resident Koreans in Japan.” Social Problems 55 (3): 391418.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Verkuyten, Maykel. 2009. “Support for Multiculturalism and Minority Rights: The Role of National Identification and Out-Group Threat.” Social Justice Research 22 (1): 3152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Voci, Alberto. 2006. “The Link between Identification and In-Group Favoritism: Effects of Threat to Social Identity and Trust-Related Emotions.” British Journal of Social Psychology 45 (2): 265–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wyer, Natalie A. 2010. “Selective Self-Categorization: Meaningful Categorization and the In-Group Persuasion Effect.” The Journal of Social Psychology 150 (5): 452–70.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Yamanaka, Keiko. 2010. “Civil Society and Social Movements for Immigrant Rights in Japan and South Korea: Convergence and Divergence in Unskilled Immigration Policy.” Korea Observer 41 (4): 615–47.Google Scholar
Yamawaki, Keizo. 2001. “Sengonihonno Gaikokujinseisakuto Zainitikoreanno Shakaiundo” [Immigrant policies and social mobilisation of Korean residents in Japan after the WWII]. In Kokusaikato Aidenteitei, edited by Kajika, T., 286318. Tokyo: Minerva Shobo.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. Support for the granting of local suffrage to foreign residents

Figure 1

Table 2. Support for the granting of local suffrage to foreign residents by respondents’ level of nationalism

Supplementary material: File

Igarashi and Ono supplementary material

Igarashi and Ono supplementary material

Download Igarashi and Ono supplementary material(File)
File 15.1 KB