Conference Paper (unpublished)

Ideology and Entry Policy: Why Non-Socialist Parties in Sweden Support Open Door Migration Policies

Details

Citation

Spehar A, Bucken-Knapp G & Hinnfors J (2011) Ideology and Entry Policy: Why Non-Socialist Parties in Sweden Support Open Door Migration Policies. The Politics of Migration: Citizenship, Inclusion and Discourse in Europe, Glasgow, Scotland, 10.11.2011-11.11.2011. http://www.gcu.ac.uk/issjr/newsevents/managed/events/bydate/2011/1/name,35867,en.html

Abstract
While the continued growth of far-right populist parties across Europe has led to a rich body of literature detailing the impact of anti-immigrant parties on entry policies, less attention has been directed towards analyzing how mainstream non-socialist parties formulate their migration policy preferences. In this paper, we seek to correct this imbalance by addressing the case of Sweden. The conventional wisdom frequently portrays non-socialist parties as proponents of restrictive entry policies for labor migrants and asylum seekers. However, we show that center-right parties and the Greens have largely been the driving force behind key Swedish migration policy developments over the past several decades, allowing greater numbers of migrants to enter and settle permanently. Our analysis shows that non-socialist support for generous entry policies is largely consistent over time, regardless of efforts by far-right populist parties, or the socialist left, to see more restrictive entry policies enacted. To account for this stance, we focus on the role of party ideology as the missing factor. While vote maximization and inter-party competition have their place in accounts of entry policy preference formation, a more nuanced analysis requires examining the role of ideology. Long-held ideological principles help parties evaluate societal change, leading them to formulate generous entry policies in the face of pressure from both the left and the right for stricter migration policies.

Keywords
sweden; immigration; entry policy; non-socialist parties; Sweden Emigration and immigration Government policy; Political parties Sweden

StatusUnpublished
Publication date10/11/2011
Publication date online01/11/2011
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/3474
Related URLshttp://www.gla.ac.uk/media/media_214799_en.pdf
Publisher URLhttp://www.gcu.ac.uk/…me,35867,en.html
ConferenceThe Politics of Migration: Citizenship, Inclusion and Discourse in Europe
Conference locationGlasgow, Scotland
Dates