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    And Who is My Neighbor? Religion and

    Immigration Policy Attitudes

    Benjamin R. Knoll, M.A.

    Department of Political Science

    University of Iowa

    CITATION: Knoll, Benjamin R. 2009. And Who is My Neighbor? Religion and

    Immigration Policy Attitudes.Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 48(2):

    forthcoming.

    Abstract. This study explores immigration reform as a possible new moral issue upon which

    American religious elites and organizations take public positions. It is argued that religion is a

    key independent variable necessary for understanding the determinants of public attitudes

    regarding immigration policy. Theoretical expectations are formed from the ethnoreligious,

    religious restructuralism, and minority marginalization frameworks. Quantitative evidence is

    presented which demonstrates that those who attend religious services more frequently more

    likely to support liberal immigration reform policies. Members of minority religions, notably

    Jews and Latter-day Saints, are also more likely to empathize with the plight of undocumentedimmigrants and support liberal immigration reform measures.

    Acknowledgements: Please direct all correspondence to Benjamin Knoll, Department of

    Political Science, 341 Schaeffer Hall, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242. The author

    can be reached by email at [email protected]. Replication data are available from the

    author upon request. Previous versions of this paper were presented at the 2008 Midwest

    Political Science Association Conference in Chicago, IL and the 2008 Symposium of Religion

    and Politics at Calvin College, Grand Rapids, MI. Many thanks to Rene Rocha of the University

    of Iowa, David Campbell at the University of Notre Dame, and three anonymous reviewers for

    their invaluable feedback, comments, and suggestions.

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    INTRODUCTION

    Immigration reform has emerged as one of the more salient political issues in recent years. At

    the urging of President Bush, Congress attempted to pass sweeping immigration reform

    legislation in both 2006 and 2007. Proposals ranged from a hard-line mass deportation ofall

    undocumented immigrants to more comprehensive reform measures that would provide a path

    to citizenship for those currently in the United States. These congressional debates provoked

    heated and passionate discussion among the public which ultimately prevented representatives

    from being able to reach a consensus on the issue, dooming the various reform proposals.

    While several valuable studies investigating the determinants of attitudes toward immigration

    policy have been published recently (see Citrin et al 1997; Hood and Morris 1998; Hood, Morris,

    and Shirkey 1997, e.g.), religion as a key explanatory variable in these studies has been either

    marginalized or ignored. There are important reasons, however, to predict that religion is

    important to understanding immigration attitudes. Some of the more forceful and vocal

    opposition to hard-line immigration measures has recently come from the leaders of various

    American religious organizations. It has long been customary for religious leaders to take public

    stands on moral issues like abortion and homosexual marriage. The involvement of these same

    leaders and organizations in the immigration issue, however, has left observers and

    commentators speculating as to whether or not immigration now qualifies as a moral issue as

    well. The purpose of this study, therefore, is to address the virtual absence of religion in the

    literature on immigration attitudes and investigate why and how religion might play a substantive

    role in the formation of attitudes regarding immigration reform policy.

    RELIGION AND POLITICS

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    Research has previously shown that at the most basic level, an individual s religious beliefs

    can play an important role in shaping ones core values and worldviews. In turn, these can

    affect political ideology and preferences (Feldman 1988). Welch and Leege (1988), for instance,

    demonstrate that an individuals perception of the nature of God influences ones opinions on

    various matters of public policy. Bolce and de Maio (1999) show that ones level of affect

    toward evangelicals exerts an independent effect on ones partisan preferences. Along the same

    lines, Kohut et al. (2000), Layman (2001), Leege et al. (2002), and Olson and Green (2006) all

    provide evidence that religious factors are becoming decisive determinants of partisan

    preferences in the United States. These same determinants have also shown to be significant in

    studies investigating both political participation (Miller and Shanks 1996) as well as citizen

    activism (Verba, Schlozman, and Brady 1995). Furthermore, religion has also been shown to

    strongly affect entire U.S. presidential elections (Campbell 2007; Green 2007; Green, Wilcox

    and Rozell, 2006; Guth et al. 2006).

    Other scholars have investigated the effect of religion on individual attitudes toward various

    moral public policy issues. These issues have been further classified as dealing with either 1)

    social-justice issues or 2) matters of personal morality (see Guth et al. 1997). Concerning

    personal morality issues, studies have shown that religious conservatism and attitudes about

    doctrinal orthodoxy are significant predictors of attitudes toward abortion (Leege 1983, e.g.),

    homosexual marriage (Wood and Bartkowski 2004, e.g.) and euthanasia (Hamil-Luker and

    Smith 1998). Research has also extended these findings into broader social-justice morality

    issues and shown that attitudes toward the environment (Guth et al. 1995), the economy (Barker

    and Carman 2000), and even the Israel/Middle East conflict (Mayer 2004) have all been

    influenced by individual religious beliefs as well.

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    The current study seeks to contribute to this area of the literature. With the involvement of

    religious elites in the public debate, as will be described in more detail, immigration may very

    well now be classified as another social-justice morality issue, subject to individual religious

    influences. What follows is a broad examination of how religion might exert this effect on

    immigration policy attitudes.

    ETHNORELIGIOUS DETERMINANTS OF IMMIGRATION ATTITUDES

    The ethnoreligious perspective (Green 2007) is one lens through which the influence of

    religion on individual attitudes can be understood. This theoretical perspective views particular

    religious tradition as a key factor in the theoretical link between religion and individual attitudes.

    If this view is accurate, religious tradition membership should be an important independent

    variable that shapes policy attitudes. Indeed, Kellstedt and Green (1993) argue that there are

    intrinsic differences in belief, practice, and commitment, even for individuals with minimal

    religiosity. Thus, [one] would expect denominational preference to influence political attitudes

    and behavior (55). Given that the religious affiliation of many Americans is now determined by

    deliberate choice rather than early socialization (Green and Guth 1993), religious tradition

    affiliation is even more likely to be associated with political policy preferences. Wald, Owen,

    and Hill (1988) support this perspective by arguing that the ideology of a particular church

    affects the individual political ideologies of its members (see also Jelen 1993).

    One would thus expect particular religious tradition to make a difference on ones public

    policy preferences, including immigration policy. One process by which this may occur is

    through elite cues and direction from religious leaders on the matter. Several studies have

    investigated the effect of the behavior of religious clergy on parishioner political attitudes and

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    behavior. Djupe and Grant (2001), for instance, find that individual religiosity can lead to more

    political participation not only through learning civic skills in ones church but also by being

    specifically recruited by church leaders to engage in political purposes. Djupe and Gilbert (2002)

    explore the nature of public political statements by clergy as well as their personal motivations

    for making such statements (see also Djupe and Gilbert 2003 and Smidt 2004). More pertinent to

    our current investigation, Campbell and Monson (2003) follow Zaller (1992) and demonstrate

    that church members, specifically Latter-day Saints, adopt the policy preferences of their leaders

    when there is consensus from those leaders on a particular issue.

    It is thus possible that members of religious traditions and denominations whose leaders

    officially and/or publicly endorse a certain type of immigration reform should be more likely to

    support those same reform policies. An in-depth investigation was therefore conducted on public

    statements regarding immigration by American religious elites. This investigation revealed that

    the leaders of several major religious traditions have officially come out in support of liberal

    immigration reform measures, specifically including an eventual path to citizenship for

    undocumented immigrants. Consider the following examples:

    Roman Catholic Church. The Catholic Church has taken perhaps the strongest stand on

    immigration reform measures. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops made an official

    announcement in 2000 (as reported on their website):We bishops commit ourselves and all the

    members of our church communities to continue the work of advocacy for laws that respect the

    human rights of immigrants and preserve the unity of the immigrant family....We join with others

    of good will in a call for legalization opportunities for the maximum number of undocumented

    persons, particularly those who have built equities and otherwise contributed to their

    communities (United States Conference of Catholic Bishops 2002). Furthermore, in 2006

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    Cardinal Roger Mahony publicly denounced a punitive House immigration bill, HR4437, and

    instructed the priests of the parishes under his jurisdiction to disobey the law were it to become

    enacted (Pomfret 2006). Later that fall, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops sent a letter to

    President Bush urging him to veto the Secure Fence Act (United States Conference of Catholic

    Bishops 2006), which Congress passed after failing to agree on an immigration reform

    compromise.

    Evangelical Protestants. Richard Land, head of the Ethics and Religious Liberty

    Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, announced in April of 2006 that although we

    have an obligation to support the government and the governments laws for conscience [sic]

    sake (Romans 13:7) As citizens of the Lords heavenly Kingdom and members of local

    colonies of that Kingdom (congregations of Christians), we also have a divine mandate to act

    redemptively and compassionately toward those who are in need (Land 2006). He went on to

    endorse a guest-worker program for the undocumented immigrants currently in the United States

    with an option for earned citizenship at the end of a four-year period.

    Mainline Protestants. The website of the Episcopalian Migration Ministries includes a

    statement from the Presiding Bishop: To make enforcement a central provision of our

    immigration policy not only fails to honor our historic tradition of offering refuge to the

    oppressed, but also denies the call of Christ to welcome the stranger as if we were receiving Him

    as our guest (Griswold 2006).A joint statement of the head of the Evangelical Lutheran Church

    in America and Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service supports a plan to provide a path to

    permanence for individuals currently residing and working in the United States as well as their

    families (Evangelical Lutheran Church in America 2007). The websites of the United Methodist

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    Church (Gilbert 2007) and the Presbyterian Church (USA) (Presbyterian Church (USA) Office

    of Immigration Issues 2006) have similar policy statements.

    As can be seen, there appears to be a general consensus among elites from dominant

    American religious traditions favoring some form of earned legalization program. This

    consensus involves elites representing nearly all major categories of religious traditions,

    including both Evangelical and Mainline Protestants, whose membership makes up more than

    seventy percent of the American population (a notable exception being the Black Protestant

    tradition).1

    If the ethnoreligious elite cues theory is valid, we should expect that membership in

    these various religious traditions, the leaders of which have taken public stands in favor of liberal

    immigration reform policies, should translate into support for comprehensive immigration

    reform policies as well. This results in our first hypothesis:

    H1: Mainline Protestants, Evangelical Protestants, and Catholics are more likely to

    support liberal immigration reform policies than those of other affiliations or those with

    no religious affiliation.

    RELIGIOUS RESTRUCTURALISM DETERMINANTS OF IMMIGRATION ATTITUDES

    The religious restructuralism perspective is a different lens through which religion could

    affect immigration policy attitudes. In contrast to the ethnoreligious perspective, this view

    predicts that individual religious commitment and behavior, not necessarily religious tradition,

    are the more accurate mechanisms of the influence of religion on political behavior and attitudes

    (Green 2007). Welch and Leege (1988), for example, provide evidence for this explanation in

    showing that devotional style, including frequency of worship service attendance among

    Catholics, is a significant predictor of attitudes toward a number of public policy issues and

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    political ideology. Wuthrow (1988) and Hunter (1991) both argue that there is a separation in

    contemporary American religious behavior between traditionalists and modernists and that

    traditionalists are more faithful in the normative religious practices, such as church attendance

    and worship. Ammerman (1997) further argues that individual religious tradition has lost much

    of its explanatory power, as Americans now move freely among the different denominations and

    switch affiliations often throughout their lives. The behavioral view has also been supported by

    Layman (1997) who argues that the distinction between more or less religious behaviors is just

    as important as the distinction of denominational affiliation in explaining how faith is connected

    to voting behavior. More recently, Green (2007) demonstrates that individual religious behavior

    had more of an impact on vote choice in the 2004 presidential election than individual religious

    tradition.

    The previous section explored the possibility that individual religious affiliation might be a

    significant independent determinant of attitudes toward immigration policy. It was established

    that a majority of the leaders of the major religious traditions in the United States have publicly

    supported liberal immigration reform in one form or another, often citing Biblical admonitions to

    care for those in need and to welcome the strangeramong us. Given the fact that a majority of

    Americans do not support liberal immigration reform measures, it leads to the possibility that the

    explanation must take into account the religious behavioral level of individuals within those

    denominations.

    Those who attend worship services more frequently are also likely to be those who hold

    deeper religious convictions2 (see Lee 2002, e.g.) and thus are also more likely to value the

    directions and endorsements of their churchs leaders. These individuals may also be more likely

    to follow elite cues (Zaller 1992) and internalize the policy positions of their churchs leaders

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    when they make public pronouncements on immigration reform. This would result in the

    adoption of more liberal immigration policy preferences. This theoretical prediction results in the

    second hypothesis:

    H2: Mainline Protestants, Evangelical Protestants, and Catholics who attend religious

    services more frequently are more likely to support liberal immigration reform policies

    than those who attend less frequently.

    RELIGIOUS MARGINALIZATION DETERMINANTS OF IMMIGRATION ATTITUDES

    An alternative theoretical link between religion and immigration attitudes is derived from the

    religious marginalization perspective. This view hypothesizes that religious minority groups

    have empathy for other minority groups and are thus more supportive of minority policies

    (Allport 1979; Betz 1994). This is because groups that have been marginalized by society

    through political or social discrimination feel a sense of shared experience with other

    marginalized groups. This theory is supported by Fetzer (1998, 2000) who applies it specifically

    to religion and ethnicity. He shows that in the United States, France, and Germany, members of

    minority religions are more likely to support pro-immigrant governmental policies.

    The minority marginalization perspective could also theoretically extend to American

    attitudes toward immigration reform. Individuals affiliating with minority religions, who have

    often been subject to both direct and indirect religious discrimination (both historically and

    contemporarily), may be more supportive of liberal immigration policies. For the purposes of

    this study, minority religions are defined as any religion with membership of less than five

    percent of the United States population. These include Jews, Latter-day Saints, and other

    which includes Hinduism, Buddhism, Pagan, Jehovahs Witnesses, Seventh-Day Adventist, and

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    others.3

    It is important to note that the leaders of many of these minority religions have nottaken

    official public stands on immigration reform legislation, and thus no predictions can be made as

    far as elite cues and the religious restructuralism theories are concerned. Instead, members of

    these religions may be more supportive of liberal immigration policies out of a feeling of shared

    marginalization with undocumented immigrants.

    The Jewish tradition, for example, represents one such minority religious group. The

    American Jewish Committee has routinely and consistently taken public stands in support of

    liberal immigration reform measures. Their website states that [a]ccording to Jewish tradition,

    strangers are to be welcomed and valued, as we were once strangers in the land of Egypt

    (American Jewish Committee 2002). Also, Gideon Aranoff, president and CEO of the Hebrew

    Immigrant Aid Society, has expressed support for comprehensive immigration reform and said

    that the same anti-immigrant arguments being made today have traditionally been used against

    Jews as well (Aranoff 2006). Furthermore, many LDS faithful today have served proselyting

    missions during which they are often socially marginalized by the communities that they serve

    in. As American citizens, they are also often marginalized by anti-Mormon sentiments that may

    exist in their own communities or as reported in the national media. For instance, a recent Pew

    survey found that nearly a third of Americans have an unfavorable view of Mormons and that

    25% would be less likely to vote for a Mormon presidential candidate (Keeter and Smith 2007).

    It follows that the marginalization hypothesis could lead members of these and other

    minority faiths to be more likely to espouse higher levels of support for undocumented

    immigrants. This then leads to the third hypothesis:

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    H3: Members of minority religions, specifically Jews, Latter-day Saints, andother,

    are more likely to support liberal immigration reform policies than those of other

    religious affiliations.

    DATA, RESEARCH DESIGN, AND METHODOLOGY

    To test the effect of religion on immigration policy attitudes, this study conducts a

    multivariate analysis of data from the 2006 Immigration Survey carried out by the Pew

    Research Center and Pew Hispanic Center. This survey was conducted from February 8th

    through March 7th, 2006 (see Table 1 for more information).

    [ Table 1 about here ]

    Dependent Variable. The survey asks respondents a series of three descriptive questions

    which allow for a more nuanced view of the respondents immigration reform preferences:

    1. Should illegal immigrants be required to go home, or should they be granted some kindof legal status that allows them to stay here?

    a) If the respondent answers required to go home they are then asked: Should it bepossible for some illegal immigrants to remain in the U.S. under a temporary

    worker program under the condition that they would eventually go home, or dont

    you think so?

    b) If the respondent answers granted some kind of legal status they are then asked:Should they be allowed to stay only as temporary workers who must eventually

    return to their home countries, or should it be possible for them to stay in the U.S.

    permanently?

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    From these responses, a three-level ordinal variable was created, assuming that the reform

    measures could be conceptualized as being more or less liberal, mass deportation being least

    liberal and earned legalization being most liberal.

    0 - Respondent favors simple deportation (answered required to go home in

    question 1 and dont think so to question 1a)

    1 - Respondent favors a guest-worker program (answered required to go home in

    question 1 and temporary worker program in question 1a; answered granted some

    kind of legal status in question 1 and temporary worker program eventually

    return in question 1a)

    4

    2 - Respondent favors an earned legalization (liberal/comprehensive) program

    (answered granted some kind of legal status in question 1 and possible for them to

    stay in the U.S. permanently in question 1b)

    After dropping the missing values, which account for about 11% of the sample,

    approximately 27% of the respondents favored mass deportation, 33% favored a guest-worker

    program, and 40% favored earned legalization (see Table 1).

    Independent Variables. The survey also includes measures of individual religious tradition

    as well as frequency of worship attendance. The first hypothesis predicts that individual religious

    tradition matters, and that Catholics, Mainline Protestants, and Evangelical Protestants should be

    are more likely to report liberal immigration policy preferences. The second hypothesis predicts

    that tradition matters, but it dependent upon frequency of worship service attendance; Catholics

    and Protestants who attend more often should be more likely to support liberal immigration

    reform measures. The third hypothesis predicts that those who affiliate with minority religions

    will also be more likely to embrace more liberal immigration policy preferences.

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    The worship service attendance variable for H2 is a six-point ordinal variable (coded 1-6)

    ranging from never attending services to attending more than once per week. The religious

    tradition variables are dummy variables which indicate that the respondent claimed affiliation

    either as a Protestant, Roman Catholic, Jew, Latter-day Saint, or other (which, when asked for

    further specificity, included Hindus, Buddhists, Pagans, Jehovahs Witnesses, and Seventh-Day

    Adventist, among others), (see Table 1). The Pew survey unfortunately did not separate out the

    Protestant category into the commonly recognized Mainline/Evangelical/Black Protestant

    divisions, so proxy variables were created for each by interacting the Protestant category with

    born-again (for Evangelical Protestant) and also black race (for Black Protestant).

    5

    Each

    major religious tradition variable was then interacted with the frequency of worship service

    attendance and included in the model to test H2, the religious restructuralism hypothesis.

    Control Variables. The statistical analysis includes a number of control variables derived

    from other studies investigating the determinants of attitudes toward immigration.

    Several socioeconomic variables are included as standard controls, but many have shown to

    be significant independent determinants in previous studies. For example, it has been

    demonstrated that women (Hughes and Tuch 2003), younger individuals (Wilson 1996), and

    those with higher levels of education (Espenshade and Calhoun 1993; Hoskin and Mishler 1983)

    are more likely to view immigrants more positively. Also, as immigration is very much a racially

    charged issue, dummy variables for Hispanic, African-American, Asian, and mixed racial

    status are included. Two ordinal variables are included measuring both partisanship and

    ideology. It is anticipated that due to the historical and contemporary emphasis that the

    Democratic Party has placed on minority rights, liberals and Democrats will be more likely to

    support liberal immigration reform measures (Hero and Tolbert 1995; Swain 1995).

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    A dummy variable is also included which measures whether or not the respondents specify

    that they are not citizens of the United States. It is anticipated that these non-citizens are more

    likely to support liberal immigration measures as they themselves would hope to benefit from

    such policies. This variable is also interacted with the Hispanic ethnicity variable to examine the

    attitudes of Hispanic non-citizens as well as non-citizens of other ethnicities.

    The economic competition hypothesis (Espenshade and Calhoun 1993; Hood, Morris, and

    Shirky 1997; Starr and Roberts 1982) posits that those with lower incomes, those who perceive

    the economy negatively, and those concerned with protecting native jobs will be less likely to

    support liberal immigration reform measures because it could increase competition for low-

    income jobs and opportunities for employment. Variables are therefore included representing

    total family income, membership in labor unions, and perception of both personal and national

    economic conditions.

    Four additional controls are included to test and control for the racial threat and social

    contact hypotheses. The racial threat hypothesis (Giles and Buckner 1993; Hood and Morris

    1998; Meier and Stuart 1991) predicts that higher levels of racial diversity will lead to increased

    inter-racial tension and animosity. The social contact theory (Oliver and Wong 2003; Welch et

    al. 2001), on the other hand, predicts that increased inter-group contact exerts the opposite effect

    and that more contact leads to increased levels of familiarity and inter-group toleration. The

    percent foreign-born population in the respondents county (2000 census) will be included in the

    model, as well as other indicators included in the survey of inter-group interaction. Respondents

    were asked how often they come into contact with those who speak little or no English, how

    many recent immigrants they perceive to live in their area, and whether or not they have friends

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    or relatives who are recent immigrants.6

    These questions are able to provide a more nuanced test

    of actual inter-group interaction and affinity towards immigrants.

    Finally, a variable is included indicating whether or not the respondent lives in a U.S.-

    Mexico border state, namely California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, as immigration attitudes

    are likely to be different for those living along the border and experiencing the effects of

    undocumented immigration first-hand on a daily basis.

    Method and Interpretation. The level of analysis is the individual survey respondent.

    Because of the nature of the dependent variable, the data will be analyzed using a generalized

    ordered logit estimator

    7

    (Williams 2006), weighted to account for the over-sampling of certain

    geographic areas in the survey (see Table 1). Standard errors are also clustered by geographic

    region due to the possibility that unobserved effects might create correlation among those who

    live in the same major metropolitan area. Coefficients produced from the generalized ordered

    logit model are interpreted the same as binary logit coefficients where the categories of the

    dependent variable have been collapsed into two categories. The coefficients for Models 1 and 3

    are thus the likelihood of preferring a guest-worker or earned citizenship policy over immediate

    deportation, whereas the coefficients reported in Models 2 and 4 indicate the likelihood of

    indicating a preference for earned citizenship over immediate deportation or a guest-worker

    program. Forbrevitys sake in the discussion section, a positive coefficient in either category

    will sometimes be referred to as more liberal immigration policy preferences. Finally, the

    predicted probabilities of each variable are also reported, which represent the probability of

    supporting a guest-worker or legalization proposal over an immediate deportation option

    (Models 1 and 3) or for supporting an eventual legalization policy over a guest-worker or

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    immediate deportation policy (Models 2 and 4), as the corresponding variables move from their

    minimum to maximum values, holding all other variables constant at their mean.

    ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION

    [ Table 2 about here ]

    Table 2 indicates the results of the multivariate analyses on the effect of religion on

    immigration preferences.8 Considering H1, the ethnoreligious hypothesis, Model 2 indicates that

    Mainline Protestants, Evangelical Protestants, and Catholics are neither more nor less likely to

    support an earned legalization or guest-worker option over a mass deportation, although they are

    less likely to support an earned legalization option over the other two options.9

    While these

    results appear contrary to initial predictions, it should be kept in mind that because these

    variables are also interacted with frequency of church attendance in the model, the coefficients

    are interpretable only when the church attendance is zero. Substantively, this indicates only that

    Protestants and Catholics who never attend worship services are less likely to have liberal

    immigration policy preferences. Indeed, Models 1 and 2 indicate that born-again Protestants and

    Catholics who attend religious services more frequently are more likely to report more liberal

    immigration policy preferences. This partly confirms H2 and adds support to the idea that those

    belonging to traditions whose leaders have publicly endorsed more liberal immigration policies

    are more likely to internalize those preferences if they have higher degrees of religious

    commitment. It should be noted, however, that the coefficients for Mainline Protestants are

    insignificant, indicating that H2 holds for some traditions but not for others.

    Model 1 also shows that black Protestants who frequently attend services are significantly

    more likely to support an immediate deportation policy option over either a guest-worker or

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    earned legalization option, although they are ambivalent toward an earned citizenship option in

    Model 2. This may correspond with the absence of official public stances on the issue by

    religious elites from that tradition. This may also be attributable to inter-racial competition

    between the African-American and Latino communities over zero-sum economic resources like

    jobs (see Meier, et al. 2004).

    Finally, there appears to be mixed support for H3,the minority marginalization hypothesis, as

    Jews and Latter-day Saints are more likely to favor a guest-worker or earned legalization option

    over immediate deportation. Model 2 also demonstrates that Jews are less likely to profess

    preferences for an earned legalization program.

    A high degree of caution should be exercised with these results, however, as a test for

    multicollinearity reveals severe problems with these models as estimated. There is an

    unacceptable amount of collinearity between the various religion variables, which calls the

    integrity of these results into question. Indeed, the mean Variance Inflation Factor score of these

    key independent variables is 22.99 with a range from 1.02 to 52.5.10

    Consequently, Models 3 and 4 are more parsimonious and exclude the variables responsible

    for the severe multicollinearity in Models 1 and 2. These models retain frequency of church

    attendance and minority religious tradition membership, which still allows for a general test of

    both H2 and H3 without the ambiguity created by multicollinearity in Models 1 and 2. The

    remaining discussion will focus on Models 3 and 4 as these results are substantially more

    reliable.

    The coefficients for religious service attendance in Models 3 and 4 are both positive and

    significant, indicating again that those who attend services more often are more likely to indicate

    increasingly liberal immigration policy preferences. Furthermore, all else being equal, the

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    likelihood of supporting a guest-worker or legalization proposal over an immediate deportation

    option and for supporting an eventual legalization policy over a guest-worker or immediate

    deportation policy increases by 7.3% and 5.2%, respectively, as individuals move from never

    attending worship services to attending more than once per week. While this is not an

    overwhelming magnitude, it is comparable to the average size of the effect of other important

    demographic determinants such as education (6.1%) or age (10.1%).

    Consistent with the predictions of the minority marginalization hypothesis, Jews are

    significantly more likely to support increasingly liberal immigration policy preferences. Latter-

    day Saints are also more likely to favor an earned legalization program over alternative

    immigration proposals, although no more or less likely to disfavor immediate deportation

    (although the variable does approach significance in a positive direction, p=0.121). It should be

    kept in mind, however, that in addition to the marginalization hypothesis, these results for Latter-

    day Saints are also likely at least partly attributable to the affinity that many LDS faithful

    develop toward Latinos as a result of two-year mission experiences in Central and South

    American countries, as well as to Latino immigrants in the United States. A calculation of the

    predicted probabilities reveals that, holding all other variables constant at their mean values,

    Jews are 13.8% more likely, on average, to support increasingly liberal immigration policies.

    Latter-day Saints, for their part, are an average of 10.1% more likely to report more liberal

    preferences.

    The effect of minority religion membership on immigration policy attitudes is even more

    notable when considering that its combined effect is outweighed only by ideology (which affects

    immigration attitudes by an average probability of 30% as individuals move from being very

    conservative to very liberal), the amount of foreign-born individuals living in ones county

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    (22.8%), and Hispanic ethnicity (Hispanic non-citizens 27.4%, Hispanic citizens 17.5%). Being a

    Jew or Latter-day Saint has a higher impact on the difference in ones immigration policy

    preferences than other well-known determinants such as education (6.1%) and gender (3.1%).

    The effect is also higher than that of contextual determinants such as contact with non-English

    speakers (7.3%) or having friends who are immigrants (8.8%).

    CONTROL VARIABLES

    The socioeconomic control variables in Models 3 and 4 reveal results in the expected

    direction. As presupposed, those with higher levels of education, younger individuals, and

    females are significantly more likely to support liberal immigration policies, as are both

    Hispanics and non-citizen Hispanics. The interaction term gives the interpretation that non-

    Hispanic non-citizens are neither more nor less likely to have a different preferences either way.

    Additionally, liberals and Democrats are more likely to support measures to provide for a way

    for undocumented immigrants to remain permanently in the country.11

    The economic threat hypothesis receives support from these findings. Members of labor

    unions and those who perceive both their own and the national economic situation poorly are less

    likely to be supportive of liberal immigration reform measures. Family income does not achieve

    statistical significance. Also, contrary to conventional wisdom, it appears that living in a border

    state appears to have no effect on ones immigration policy attitudes when controlling for other

    factors.

    Finally, Branton and Jones (2005) argue that the inter-racial pacifying effects of the social

    contact hypothesis come into play only when the contact is between individuals of similar

    socioeconomic status. Their conclusion is supported by these results which show that those who

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    have friends (likely to be of similar socioeconomic status) that are immigrants are more likely to

    support liberal immigration reform measures while those who perceive themselves as living in

    areas with higher amounts of recent immigrants and have frequent contact with non-English

    speakers are less likely to support liberal immigration measures. These findings are tempered,

    however, by the finding that the percent foreign-born in ones county (holding these other

    variables constant), increases ones likelihood for supporting an earned legalization policy,

    which provides more general support for the social contact hypothesis. See Oliver and Wong

    (2003) for a further discussion of the sometimes conflicting effect of various measures of inter-

    racial contact in predicting racial attitudes.

    ALTERNATIVE VIEWS CONSIDERED

    The most obvious objection presented by these conclusions is that immigration policy

    attitudes are indeed influenced by religious factors, but not through the elite cues mechanism as

    previously developed. One could argue that the fact that a particular religious organization

    publishes an official policy endorsement on its website does not guarantee that such

    endorsements are echoed by individual congregational leaders and thus it is highly unlikely that

    the average parishioner is even aware of his or her churchs stand on immigration policy.

    In response, it is admitted that the empirical results presented in this paper do not

    conclusively prove a causal mechanism between elite cues and parishioner attitudes. Even

    though we have herein demonstrated with confidence that religion exerts an independent effect

    on immigration preferences, the argument for elite cues presented in this paper is merely implied

    by these results.

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    It could alternatively be argued that religious individuals may be more inclined to support

    liberal immigration reform measures because they are simply more likely to be attempting to live

    the Judeo-Christian value which teaches to love thy neighbor. While such a theoretical

    mechanism is indeed possible, it is almost impossible to test empirically given the data and

    methods employed in this particular study. Such an enterprise would require making several

    assumptions about the appropriate political application of religious doctrine. Does welcoming

    the stranger among us mean that the government should promote open borders, a guest-worker

    program, or a path to citizenship? It could legitimately be argued that loving ones neighbor

    includes encouraging him or her to be honorable in obeying immigration laws and procedures.

    Objective analysts, however, are in no position to interpret religious doctrine for the individual

    church member and/or toprescribe the correct policy position that should be taken.

    It is thus argued that the elite cues mechanism discussed in this study, support for which is

    implied, may be more objectively reliable because the official policy positions that religious

    organizations have endorsed do not require any subjective interpretation on the part of the

    analyst. Further research is certainly called for to illuminate further the causal relationship

    between religious affiliation, level of religiosity, and immigration policy preferences.

    CONCLUSION

    This study has explored immigration reform as a new moral social-justice issue on which

    American religious elites and organizations take public stances. It has been argued that religion

    is a key independent variable necessary for understanding more comprehensively the

    determinants of attitudes toward immigration policy. After discussing three distinct theoretical

    frameworks through which religion may impact immigration attitudes (ethnoreligious, religious

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    restructuralism, and minority marginalization), quantitative evidence has been presented which

    demonstrates that those who attend religious services more frequently have a greater likelihood

    of possessing liberal immigration policy preferences. Members of minority religions, notably

    Jews and Latter-day Saints, are also more likely to empathize with the plight of undocumented

    immigrants and support liberal immigration reform measures.

    One of the implications of this study for the field of religion and politics is that immigration

    should be included among the moral issues12 typically analyzed and discussed by researchers.

    Another is that there is now further evidence for the religious restructuralism theoretical

    framework and support for the argument that religious elites may exert an impact upon American

    public policy preferences. Furthermore, the results of this study provide support for the minority

    marginalization theory which has not received a great deal of attention in the literature on either

    religion and politics or race and politics. Lastly, this study provides evidence for the conclusion

    that, contrary to conventional wisdom, individual religiosity can sometimes lead to more liberal

    policy preferences. Religion and conservative public policies apparently do not always go hand

    in hand.

    For researchers studying the determinants of immigration policy preferences, and race and

    politics more generally, the results of this study indicate that religious factors exert an

    independent and significant effect on public policy opinions toward immigration reform. This

    implies that religious variables are required, either as independent or control variables, in any

    analysis of the determinants of attitudes on immigration policy or race and ethnicity. At the very

    least, such studies should include control variables for frequency of worship attendance, which is

    often available in public opinion surveys, and minority religion membership, if not specifically

    Judaism and Latter-day Saints.

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    Perhaps the most salient lesson learned from this study is that religion not only exerts an

    independent effect on individual immigration policy attitudes, but that the effect is as strong as

    other traditional determinants of immigration attitudes. Indeed, these results demonstrate that the

    effect of religion is comparable in magnitude to other significant determinants of immigration

    attitudes such as socioeconomic characteristics, economic perceptions, and racial/ethnic context.

    It is not unreasonable to conclude that religion causes individuals to take into consideration

    undocumented immigrants when they ask themselves the Biblical query: And who is my

    neighbor?

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    Table 1. DESCRIPTIVE STATISTICS OF CHURCH ATTENDANCE AND RELIGIOUS

    AFFILIATION

    Frequency of Church

    Attendance Religious Tradition

    Immigration Reform

    Preferences

    N

    Weighted

    % N

    Weighted

    % N

    Weighted

    %

    Never 670 12.1% Protestant 3,044 51.8% Deport all 1,422 27.3%

    Seldom 865 14.9%

    Roman

    Catholic 1,583 28.1% Guest worker 1,813 32.9%

    Few times a

    year 1,094 18.7% Jewish 135 1.9%

    Earned

    legalization 2,076 39.8%

    Once or twicea month 905 15.7% Mormon 126 2.3%

    Dontknow/refused 692

    Once a week 1,578 25.9%

    Orthodox

    Greek/Russian 40 0.7%

    More than

    once a week 750 12.6% Islam/Muslim 35 0.7%

    Dontknow/refused 141 Other 140 2.4%

    No religion /

    atheist 701 12.0%

    Dontknow/refused 199

    Data derived from the 2006 Immigration Survey carried out by the Pew Research Centerfor The People & The Press,

    conducted February 8March 7, 2006. N=6,003. The survey over-sampled metropolitan areas with higher Latino and

    immigrant populations; Chicago, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Raleigh-Durham, and Washington, D.C. account for two-thirds of

    the responses. Percentages are weighted to account for this over-sampling and exclude the dont know/refused category.

    The Pew Research Center bears no responsibility for the interpretations presented or conclusions reached in this study.

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    Table 2. RESULTS OF MULTIVARIATE ANALYSES OF DETERMINANTS OF

    IMMIGRATION ATTITUDES

    MODEL 1

    R prefers

    guest-worker /

    legalization over

    deportation

    MODEL 2

    R prefers

    legalization over

    guest-worker /

    deportation

    MODEL 3

    R prefers

    guest-worker /

    legalization over

    deportation

    MODEL 4

    R prefers

    legalization over

    guest-worker /

    deportation

    Independent

    Variable

    B

    (Std. Error)

    Discrete

    change

    Min

    Max

    B

    (Std. Error)

    Discrete

    change

    Min

    Max

    B

    (Std.

    Error)

    Discrete

    change

    Min

    Max

    B

    (Std.

    Error)Discrete

    change

    Min

    Max

    Constant0.722

    (0.620)

    0.006

    (0.270)

    0.165

    (0.353)

    -1.097

    (0.315)

    Frequency of

    Church Attendance

    -0.180

    (0.129)-0.136

    -0.140

    (0.093)-0.158

    0.082**

    (0.027)

    0.073 0.044**

    (0.021)

    0.052

    Born-again

    Christian

    0.046

    (0.199)0.007

    0.046

    (0.225)0.011

    Protestant-0.579

    (0.701)-0.097

    -1.085**

    (0.426)-0.220

    Born-again *

    Protestant

    -0.403

    (0.580)-0.065

    -1.557**

    (0.527)-0.300

    Black * Protestant0.524

    (0.680)0.071

    -0.110

    (0.484)-0.025

    Roman Catholic -0.393(0.352) -0.063 -1.292***(0.290) -0.259

    Jewish13.650***

    (1.103)0.233

    -14.652***

    (1.230)-0.411

    0.720**

    (0.337)0.105

    0.693**

    (0.267)0.171

    Latter-day Saints1.440**

    (0.483)0.140

    0.271

    (0.449)0.063

    0.499

    (0.322)0.078

    0.502**

    (0.186)0.124

    Other religion0.593

    (0.547)0.076

    -0.172

    (0.382)-0.038

    0.223

    (0.336)0.037

    0.363

    (0.273)0.089

    Protestant *

    Attendance

    0.298

    (0.192)0.183

    0.172

    (0.144)0.248

    Born-again *

    Prot. * Attendance

    0.270*

    (0.143)0.184

    0.249*

    (0.136)0.354

    Black * Protestant *

    Attendance

    -0.197*

    (0.116)-0.234

    -0.078

    (0.120)-0.098

    Roman Catholic *

    Attendance

    0.248**

    (0.096)0.169

    0.264**

    (0.104)0.376

    Controls

    Education0.034

    (0.024)0.032

    0.046

    (0.035)0.062

    0.058**

    (0.023)0.062

    0.041**

    (0.020)0.059

    Female0.137*

    (0.075)0.021

    0.131

    (0.092)0.030

    0.152***

    (0.045)0.027

    0.146*

    (0.095)0.035

    Age -0.003 -0.039 -0.009** -0.149 -0.002 -0.035 -0.009** -0.166

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    (0.003) (0.004) (0.003) (0.003)

    Hispanic1.123***

    (0.126)0.132

    0.806***

    (0.158)0.193

    1.151***

    (0.093)0.160

    0.770***

    (0.148)0.189

    Black0.402

    (0.268)0.056

    0.710***

    (0.221)0.169

    0.125

    (0.143)0.022

    0.231**

    (0.086)0.056

    Asian0.629**

    (0.289)

    0.079-0.404

    (0.384)

    -0.0850.091

    (0.271)

    0.016-0.526*

    (0.282)

    -0.117

    Mixed ethnicity0.140

    (0.171)0.021

    0.241**

    (0.117)0.056

    0.097

    (0.162)0.017

    0.311**

    (0.146)0.076

    Non-citizen0.258

    (0.590)0.037

    0.074

    (0.779)0.017

    0.349

    (0.354)0.057

    0.064

    (0.516)0.015

    Hispanic * non-

    citizen

    1.533

    (1.028)0.150

    1.358

    (0.839)0.327

    1.535*

    (0.945)0.180

    1.564**

    (0.628)0.367

    Republican0.017

    (0.088)0.003

    -0.075

    (0.163)-0.017

    -0.060

    (0.082)-0.011

    -0.163

    (0.128)-0.039

    Democrat0.123*

    (0.071)0.019

    0.110

    (0.099)0.025

    0.165***

    (0.051)0.029

    0.143**

    (0.072)0.034

    Ideology (liberal +)0.293***

    (0.054)0.176

    0.337***

    (0.072)0.301

    0.296***

    (0.058)0.206

    0.419***

    (0.081)0.385

    Family income -0.022(0.026) -0.027 -0.049(0.031) -0.089 -0.020(0.021) -0.029 -0.023(0.034) -0.044

    Labor union-0.264***

    (0.061)-0.043

    -0.297**

    (0.129)-0.064

    -0.232**

    (0.100)-0.043

    -

    0.304***

    (0.092)

    -0.070

    National economic

    perception (better +)

    0.252***

    (0.057)0.111

    0.146***

    (0.036)0.100

    0.249***

    (0.072)0.128

    0.152**

    (0.055)0.109

    Personal economic

    perception (better +)

    0.146**

    (0.062)0.067

    0.186**

    (0.073)0.125

    0.122**

    (0.050)0.065

    0.141**

    (0.065)0.100

    Foreign-born in

    county2000

    1.738*

    (0.899)0.118

    2.897***

    (1.070)0.346

    1.491

    (0.048)0.121

    2.738***

    (0.607)0.334

    Border state0.215

    (0.134)0.032

    0.108

    (0.101)0.025

    0.113

    (0.053)0.020

    0.067

    (0.085)0.016

    Contact with non-Eng. Speakers

    -0.179***(0.030)

    -0.075 -0.076**(0.039)

    -0.053

    -

    0.184***

    (0.034)

    -0.090 -0.076*(0.042)

    -0.055

    Friends who are

    immigrants

    0.423***

    (0.084)0.061

    0.440***

    (0.073)0.102

    0.406***

    (0.992)0.069

    0.440***

    (0.052)0.106

    Perceived

    immigrants in area

    -0.120*

    (0.070)-0.053

    -0.136**

    (0.045)-0.094

    -0.080**

    (0.135)-0.042

    -

    0.110***

    (0.033)

    -0.079

    Pseudo R2 0.0877 0.0813

    N 3,511 4,188

    * p 0.10, ** p 0.05, *** p 0.001

    Models estimated via generalized ordered logit estimators, using both weighted values and clustered standard errors by

    geographic region. Robust standard errors are also used to account for heteroskedasticity in the models. The discrete

    change values indicate the change in probability of supporting each policy proposal as the corresponding variable

    moves from its minimum to maximum value, holding all others constant.

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    33

    1Note: The statistics on religion and immigration attitudes cited in this study are derived from

    the 2006 Pew Immigration Survey described in Table 1. Sampling weights are also employed

    throughout to account for over-sampling of several metropolitan areas in the survey.

    2 There are, of course, several other (and arguably superior) ways that individual religiosity can

    be measured. Frequency of church attendance was unfortunately the only question asked in the

    survey employed in this study to measure individual religious behavior. Mockabee, Monson, and

    Grant (2001), however, provide evidence indicating that church attendance or scripture reading

    are normally adequate proxy variables for religious commitment.3 Although qualifying by this criterion, Muslims and Greek/Russian Orthodox members will be

    excluded from this study due to the shortage of respondents in the survey (see Table 1). Without

    more respondents, any results would be largely idiosyncratic.

    4 As a sensitivity test, alternative models were estimated using a four-point ordinal dependent

    variable in which the two temporary guest-worker options were not combined as they are in

    the 1 variable category. The coefficients of the key independent variables were not appreciably

    altered in either significance or direction.

    5These proxies are obviously imperfect, as not all Evangelical Protestants describe themselves as

    born-again, nor do all black Protestants consider themselves Black Protestants. It is believed to

    be the best option available, however, given the limitations of the data.

    6 It should be noted that there is a possibility of endogeneity between individual contact with

    non-English speakers, having friends who are immigrants, and immigration policy preferences.

    Removing these variables from the models, however, does not appreciably alter the results of the

    key independent variables in significance, direction, or magnitude.

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    34

    7The models were originally estimated with a standard ordinal logit method, but the models

    failed a test of the ordinal logistic proportional odds assumption, resulting in the use of a

    generalized ordinal logit estimator. As explained in Williams (2006), this method can estimate

    models that are less restrictive than the proportional odds/parallel lines models but more

    parsimonious and interpretable than those estimated by a non-ordinal method, such as

    multinomial logistic regression.

    8 Despite the relatively large size of the sample analyzed herein (N=6,003), many respondents

    refused to answer several demographic questions regarding their income (N=728), partisanship

    (N=370), ideology (N=363), or religion (N=199). Additionally, a full 692 respondents declined

    to indicate their immigration policy preference. These missing cases all contributed to produce

    the truncated N of 3,511 and 4,188 analyzed by these models.

    9These results hold when excluding the church attendance variables from the model (results not

    presented).

    10 Despite this uncertainty, the presence of multicollinearity increases the magnitude of the

    standard errors in the model, decreasing the likelihood of finding statistically significant results.

    The fact that the key independent variables retained their significance is further evidence of the

    strength of the results presented herein. Also, the severe multicollinearity would seem to account

    for the unusually large and inconsistent coefficients of the Jewish religion variable in Models 1

    and 2.

    11

    Because of the traditional correlation between religious service attendance and political

    conservatism, Models 3 and 4 were re-estimated excluding partisanship and ideology. The results

    produced similar results, with the key independent variables maintaining their significance and

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    direction. The exception is church attendance losing significance and the other religion

    variable gaining positive significance in Model 4.

    12By concluding that immigration reform is a moral issue, it is not meant to imply that

    immigration should be considered exclusively as a moral issue, as it obviously is an issue that

    also has many cultural, economic, and social ramifications. It is also not implied that this study

    has subjected the morality of the immigration issue to empirical evaluation. Rather, it is argued

    that immigration should now be considered as a moral issue in that religious leaders have

    begun to speak out publicly and frequently on the topic and that religion exerts an independent

    and significant effect on immigration attitudes in the American public. This is similar to the

    effect that religion exerts on attitudes toward more commonly-accepted moral issues such as

    abortion and homosexual marriage.