@article{THESIS,
      recid = {7140},
      author = {Gay, Olivia},
      title = {Do Stronger Social Safety Nets correspond to Greater  Refugee Acceptance? },
      publisher = {University of Chicago},
      school = {M.A.},
      address = {2023-08},
      number = {THESIS},
      abstract = {When it comes to scholarship on refugees, most of it  delves into the impact refugees have on host communities  and what factors result in their exclusion, yet none delves  into what results in greater inclusion. Drawing on Campbell  et Al. ‘s (1965) theory regarding in-group and out-group  competition, this paper puts forth an argument that when  governments take steps to both protect its citizens and the  refugees it hosts via stronger social safety nets, this is  correlated with greater refugee inclusion. This paper finds  large support for this idea, especially regarding the  independent variables, social safety, and union density.  However, worker protections for temporary workers are  inversely and significantly correlated with refugee  inclusion, illustrating that not all parts of a countries’  social safety net operate the same way. This paper also  pulls into question the validity of previous exclusion and  impact scholarship, as the majority of the controls  employed in this study, taken directly from past work, are  insignificant. },
      url = {http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/7140},
      doi = {https://doi.org/10.6082/uchicago.7140},
}