Pepperdine Digital Commons - Seaver College Research And Scholarly Achievement Symposium: Do Mexicans Want a Wall?: Mexican Immigration Attitudes
 

Do Mexicans Want a Wall?: Mexican Immigration Attitudes

Author(s)

Leonardo ReaFollow

Presentation Type

Oral Presentation

Presentation Type

Submission

Department

Political Science

Major

Political Science

Abstract

Attitudes toward immigrants shape political discussion and public perception. Scholars highlight immigration attitudes as being driven by factors such as culture and economics. Public opinion theories from scholars such as Sears and Downs provide a basis for the theories posed in the study. Research on immigration attitudes has primarily focused on North America and Europe, but Mexico has not been investigated as extensively. This study looks to see if there has been a shift in Mexican attitudes toward immigrants and what factors play a role in shaping attitudes. To do this, I test whether Mexican attitudes toward immigrants have shifted over time and what factors shape opinion. I analyze public opinion polls done by the Latinobarómetro in 2018, 2020, and 2023. I ran ordered logistic regressions for each year to decipher which variables influenced Mexican public attitudes. The results suggest that influential variables changed over time, with economic status, party identification, age, and region having more negative attitudes toward immigrants. I find support for a shift in immigration attitudes within Mexico.

Faculty Mentor

Joel Fetzer

Funding Source or Research Program

Political Science Honors Program

Location

Black Family Plaza Classroom 189

Start Date

11-4-2025 2:30 PM

End Date

11-4-2025 2:45 PM

This document is currently not available here.

Share

COinS
 
Apr 11th, 2:30 PM Apr 11th, 2:45 PM

Do Mexicans Want a Wall?: Mexican Immigration Attitudes

Black Family Plaza Classroom 189

Attitudes toward immigrants shape political discussion and public perception. Scholars highlight immigration attitudes as being driven by factors such as culture and economics. Public opinion theories from scholars such as Sears and Downs provide a basis for the theories posed in the study. Research on immigration attitudes has primarily focused on North America and Europe, but Mexico has not been investigated as extensively. This study looks to see if there has been a shift in Mexican attitudes toward immigrants and what factors play a role in shaping attitudes. To do this, I test whether Mexican attitudes toward immigrants have shifted over time and what factors shape opinion. I analyze public opinion polls done by the Latinobarómetro in 2018, 2020, and 2023. I ran ordered logistic regressions for each year to decipher which variables influenced Mexican public attitudes. The results suggest that influential variables changed over time, with economic status, party identification, age, and region having more negative attitudes toward immigrants. I find support for a shift in immigration attitudes within Mexico.