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ID171842
Title ProperTransnational Ties and Support for Foreign Aid
LanguageENG
AuthorPrather, Lauren ;  Lauren Prather
Summary / Abstract (Note)Although globalization and international migration have increased personal connections across national borders, we know little about how these connections affect attitudes toward foreign policy. This study examines how transnational ties affect support for foreign aid in donor countries. It argues that transnational ties increase support for foreign aid via two mechanisms: group interests and cosmopolitanism. An original survey experiment embedded in a national survey of one thousand Latino Americans shows that Latinos vary significantly in the strength of their transnational ties, which is strongly correlated with support for foreign aid. The findings from the experiment, which varies the location of an American foreign aid program, demonstrate that, although group interests explain some of this effect, cosmopolitanism is also an important mechanism. Indeed, Latinos with transnational ties equally support aid to Africa and Latin America. A test of the generalizability of the findings to other racial and ethnic groups in the United States and United Kingdom reveal that group interests may be a more powerful mechanism outside of the Latino American community. This study encourages further work on the relationship between transnational ties and foreign policy attitudes and provides insight into the emerging link between international migration and foreign aid.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Studies Quarterly Vol. 64, No.1; Mar 2020: p. 133–147
Journal SourceInternational Studies Quarterly Vol: 64 No 1
Key WordsForeign Aid ;  Transnational Ties


 
 
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