Differential Discrimination against Mobile EU Citizens: Experimental Evidence from Bureaucratic Choice Settings
Author(s)
Adam, Christian
Fernández-i-Marín, Xavier
James, Oliver
Rapp, Carolin
Thomann, Eva
Date issued
April 23, 2021
In
Journal of European Public Policy
No
online view
From page
1
To page
19
Reviewed by peer
1
Subjects
Accountability Conjoint experiment Discrimination EU citizenship Street-level bureaucracy
Abstract
EU citizens have rights when living in a member state other than their own. Bureaucratic discrimination undermines the operation of these rights. We go beyond extant research on bureaucratic discrimination in two ways. First, we move beyond considering mobile EU citizens as homogenous immigrant minority to assess whether EU citizens from certain countries face greater discrimination than others. Second, we analyse whether discrimination patterns vary between the general population and public administrators regarding attributes triggering discrimination and whether accountability prevents discrimination. In a pre-registered design, we conduct a population-based conjoint experiment in Germany including a sub-sample of public administrators. We find that (1) Dutch and fluent German speakers are preferred, i.e. positively discriminated, over Romanians and EU citizens with broken language skills, that (2) our way of holding people accountable was ineffective, and that (3) in all these regards discriminatory behaviour of public administrators is similar to the general population.
Publication type
journal article
File(s)
