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Closing the Membership Gap? Membership Penalties, Signals of Commitment and Support for Redistribution

Publié le 11 février 2026 Mis à jour le 11 février 2026



Séminaire axe Partis, Élections, Représentation with Franziska Höhne, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany

With Allison Harell, professor of political science, Université du Québec, Montréal


Bio

Allison Harell is a full professor of political science at the Université du Québec à Montréal. She previously held the UQAM Strategic Chair in the Political Psychology of Social Solidarity, and is a current fellow of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research. She has worked extensively on how social identities and intergroup relations influence political attitudes and behaviours. She was a co-principal investigator on the 2019, 2021 and 2025 Canadian Election Studies (CES), and currently co-directs the Consortium on Electoral Democracy (C-Dem).

Abstract

Immigrants face a “membership penalty”: while migrants often face a myriad of prejudices, they are also often judged as less committed to their new country compared to native-born citizens, and as a result, the public often feels justified in excluding them from social and political rights. In this paper, we first document the size of this membership gap in the comparative context. We then explore whether membership perceptions can be manipulated with signals about the economic and social contributions of immigrants through a series of unique social media profile experiments. Conducted in five countries (US, Canada, UK, France, China) in 2025, the experiments present the profile of a fictional person (either an immigrant or native-born citizen) who is raising money to help the victims of a natural disaster.  We manipulate whether the disaster occurred in the country of the survey, the country of origin of the immigrant, or some third country. Our hypothesis is that an immigrants' choice of who to help will be interpreted as a signal of their membership commitment (or lack of commitment), and that this in turn will directly influence assessments of the immigrants' deservingness for social rights. We also manipulate work status and race to show that signals of membership commitment matter in a way that are not reducible to these familiar factors that shape deservingness judgements, and this is particularly true for immigrants compared to native-born citizens. The results of this study seek to 1) document the extent of the membership penalty in an experimental context, 2) document the extent of malleability of membership perceptions, and 3) the influence of membership cues on support for redistribution.

 

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Date(s)
Le 23 avril 2026

12:30 - 14:00

Lieu(x)

ULB I Campus du Solbosch

Salle Henri Janne (S15.331)

Bâtiment S, 15è étage
44, Avenue Jeanne - 1050 Bruxelles