Short-Term Economic and Social Effects of Humanitarian Immigration

Short-Term Economic and Social Effects of Humanitarian Immigration

Client/Allowance

Fritz Thyssen Stiftung

Period: 01.04.2017 – 31.12.2020

Increased refugee immigration to Europe in 2015 still constitutes a major policy concern for host countries. At that time, potential impacts of immigration on host countries’ societies and economies were controversially debated by the public and by scholars. This research project contributed to this issuer by assessing short-run causal effects of the humanitarian immigration to Germany with microeconometric methods and new data sets. Three main research questions have been investigated: How does the recent immigration affect (i) native employment, (ii) attitudes of the native population towards immigrants and (iii) crime rates of the foreign-born population within Germany.

Project members

Katrin Sommerfeld

Katrin Sommerfeld

Coordinator
Leitung Nachwuchsforschungsgruppe

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Martin Lange

Martin Lange

Advanced Researcher

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Friedhelm Pfeiffer

Friedhelm Pfeiffer

Stellvertretende Leitung

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Paul Berbée

Paul Berbée

Researcher

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Bernd Fitzenberger

Bernd Fitzenberger

Research Associate

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Christina Gathmann

Christina Gathmann

Research Associate

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Horst Entorf

Horst Entorf

Research Fellow

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Allowance
Cooperation partner
Humboldt-University of Berlin (HUB), Berlin, DE // University of Frankfurt, Frankfurt am Main, DE // University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, DE // University College London, London, UK // Pädagogische Hochschule Heidelberg, Heidelberg, DE

Selected Publications

Refugees Welcome? Understanding the Regional Heterogeneity of Anti-Refugee Hate Crime

Entorf, Horst and Martin Lange (2023), Refugees Welcome? Understanding the Regional Heterogeneity of Anti-Refugee Hate Crime, Regional Science and Urban Economics

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