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Terrorism, Immigration and Asylum Approval

13 Mar 2020

Using the universe of individual asylum cases in the United States from 2000-2004 and a difference-indifferences research design, we test whether Sept. 11, 2001 decreased the likelihood that applicants from Muslim-majority countries were granted asylum. Our estimates suggest that the attacks resulted in a 3.2 percentage point decrease in the likelihood that applicants from Muslim-majority countries are granted asylum. The estimated effect is larger for applicants who share a country of origin with the Sept. 11, 2001 attackers. These effects do not differ across judge political affiliation. Our findings provide evidence that emotions affect the decisions of judges.
economics science and technology psychology ethics immigration regression analysis refugee judge asylum seeker court errors and residuals judiciary trial (court) ordinary least squares coefficient of determination emotion availability heuristic asylees asylum in the united states asylee

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Pages
39
Published in
Ottawa, ON, CA

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