Policy, ignorance, and the will of the people: The case of “good immigrants”. Ahlstrom-Vij, K. & Steele, J. In Political Epistemology, pages 180–205. 2021.
doi  abstract   bibtex   
It is well established that the general population tend to lack in-depth knowledge about key political and policy matters. What are the implications for policymaking? This chapter considers this question in the context of immigration policy, reporting first on a focus group study which offers evidence that reported desires for a reduced number of immigrants might ultimately reflect a desire for immigrants of (perceived) high quality, not a reduction in overall quantity, where quality is defined in terms of fiscal impact. The chapter then argues that public preferences for such “good immigrants” are problematic, deploying a number of counterfactual models that suggest that such preferences are based on mistaken beliefs, and arguing that they thereby likely fail to reflect what the person truly desires. These findings extend beyond immigration policy and serve to highlight the often-overlooked problem that policies implemented with reference to popular sentiments might not capture “the will of the people.”. © the several contributors 2021.
@incollection{ahlstrom-vij_policy_2021,
	title = {Policy, ignorance, and the will of the people: {The} case of “good immigrants”},
	isbn = {978-0-19-289333-8},
	shorttitle = {Policy, ignorance, and the will of the people},
	abstract = {It is well established that the general population tend to lack in-depth knowledge about key political and policy matters. What are the implications for policymaking? This chapter considers this question in the context of immigration policy, reporting first on a focus group study which offers evidence that reported desires for a reduced number of immigrants might ultimately reflect a desire for immigrants of (perceived) high quality, not a reduction in overall quantity, where quality is defined in terms of fiscal impact. The chapter then argues that public preferences for such “good immigrants” are problematic, deploying a number of counterfactual models that suggest that such preferences are based on mistaken beliefs, and arguing that they thereby likely fail to reflect what the person truly desires. These findings extend beyond immigration policy and serve to highlight the often-overlooked problem that policies implemented with reference to popular sentiments might not capture “the will of the people.”. © the several contributors 2021.},
	language = {English},
	booktitle = {Political {Epistemology}},
	author = {Ahlstrom-Vij, K. and Steele, J.R.},
	year = {2021},
	doi = {10.1093/oso/9780192893338.003.0011},
	keywords = {Counterfactual modeling, Immigration, Informed preferences, Policy, Political epistemology, Political knowledge, Will of the people},
	pages = {180--205},
}

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