TY - JOUR
T1 - Immigrants as voters in electoral autocracies
T2 - The case of Mainland Chinese immigrants in Hong Kong
AU - Wong, Stan Hok Wui
AU - Ma, Ngok
AU - Lam, Wai Man
N1 - Funding Information:
The Asian Barometer Survey Hong Kong data came from two research projects supported by the General Research Fund sponsored by the University Grants Committee (Ref. No.: 746812 and Ref. No.: 1414815). The Hong Kong Election Study data come from a research project supported by the General Research Fund sponsored by the University Grants Committee (Ref. No.: 14615915).
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2018 East Asia Institute.
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - Migration to electoral autocracies has become increasingly common. Extant studies, however, accord little attention to the immigrants' influences on the domestic politics of these regimes. We argue that immigrants have attributes (status quo bias and lack of prior exposure to local politics) that make them an attractive co-optation target of the authoritarian regime. We provide a case study of mainland Chinese immigrants in Hong Kong to illustrate our argument. Since the sovereignty transfer, the Hong Kong government has devised various schemes to attract these immigrants, while pro-establishment political parties and groups have actively sought to co-opt them. Using two distinct public opinion surveys, we also find that immigrants are more likely to approve of the political and economic status quo, and less likely to vote for pro-democracy opposition parties than the natives. In addition, we find no evidence that exposure to political information can change the immigrants' vote choice.
AB - Migration to electoral autocracies has become increasingly common. Extant studies, however, accord little attention to the immigrants' influences on the domestic politics of these regimes. We argue that immigrants have attributes (status quo bias and lack of prior exposure to local politics) that make them an attractive co-optation target of the authoritarian regime. We provide a case study of mainland Chinese immigrants in Hong Kong to illustrate our argument. Since the sovereignty transfer, the Hong Kong government has devised various schemes to attract these immigrants, while pro-establishment political parties and groups have actively sought to co-opt them. Using two distinct public opinion surveys, we also find that immigrants are more likely to approve of the political and economic status quo, and less likely to vote for pro-democracy opposition parties than the natives. In addition, we find no evidence that exposure to political information can change the immigrants' vote choice.
KW - Hong Kong politics
KW - authoritarian politics
KW - immigration
KW - vote choice
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85043285236
U2 - 10.1017/jea.2017.29
DO - 10.1017/jea.2017.29
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85043285236
SN - 1598-2408
VL - 18
SP - 67
EP - 95
JO - Journal of East Asian Studies
JF - Journal of East Asian Studies
IS - 1
ER -