Immigration bleibt ein schwieriges
Thema. Bruces Stokes, der regelmäßig für National Journal schreibt, hat am 4.
Oktober einen Artikel zur Befragung des Pew Institutes geschrieben. Was
erstaunlich ist, wie unterschiedlich die Einstellung der befragten Personen aus
den unterschiedlichen Ländern ist. So betrachten die Schweden die Auswirkungen
der Immigration überwiegend positiv, hingegen scheinen wir Deutschen weiterhin
skeptisch zu sein.
Insgesamt gesehen, wird die
voranschreitende wirtschaftliche Globalisierung positiv gesehen, mit einer
leicht skeptischen Betrachtung bei den Auswirkungen auf die Umwelt und die
nationale Kultur.
Die komplette "Pew Global
Attitues Survey" finden sie auf der folgenden Internetseite http://pewglobal.org/reports/pdf/258.pdf.
Viel
Vergnügen beim Lesen.
WORLD PUBLICS WELCOME
GLOBAL TRADE – BUT NOT IMMIGRATION
Embargoed for release at 12:00 PM
EDT, Thursday October 4
This new Pew Global Attitudes report
examines opinions in 47 countries about major international issues such as
globalization, immigration and democratization. It also covers religion,
morality and beliefs about gender, as well as how use of the internet, cell
phones and the media has changed over the last five years. The 2007 survey, the
largest ever undertaken by the Pew Global Attitudes Project, includes more than
45,000 interviews conducted in 47 nations.
The publics of the world broadly
embrace key tenets of economic globalization.
- Large majorities think international
trade is benefiting their country and multinational corporations that dominate
global commerce generally receive favorable ratings.
- Still, enthusiasm for global trade
has waned over the last five years in the West, especially in the United
States.
- In most countries, majorities think
people are better off under capitalism, even though that means some may be rich
and others poor.
- Support for capitalism increased
most in Latin American and Eastern European nations where satisfaction with
income and personal progress have increased markedly over the past five years.
But there are widely shared concerns
about the free flow of people, ideas, and resources that globalization entails.
- Few publics want economic growth at
the expense of the environment. In 46 of 47 countries, majorities say the
environment should be given priority, even if this means less growth and fewer
jobs.
- In nearly all countries, people
worry about losing their traditional culture and national identities, and they
feel their way of life should be protected against foreign influence.
The poll finds widespread concerns
about immigration.
- And there is a strong link between
immigration fears and concerns about threats to a country’s culture and
traditions.
- North Americans are generally more
welcoming to immigrants than Europeans. Among Western European publics, Swedes
are the most likely to say immigration from key immigrant groups is a good
thing for their country, while Italians and Germans express the most negative
views.
- More than one-in-five respondents in
11 of the 36 developing countries say they receive money from relatives living
in another country. In Lebanon and Bangladesh, nearly half say they receive
help from family members living abroad.
Poll findings underscore the broad social and economic forces
that are rapidly reshaping the world.
- In emerging countries large
majorities vigorously endorse core democratic values.
- Though equally large majorities in
most of the developing world say honest elections, fair trials and free speech
are not fully available to them.
- Religious freedom and an impartial
judicial system are the most prized democratic values. Somewhat smaller
majorities endorse honest multiparty elections, free speech and a media free of
government censorship.
- The weakest endorsement of democracy
is in Russia where a huge majority continue to say a strong leader, rather than
democracy, can best solve the country’s problems.
Global publics are sharply divided
over the relationship between religion and morality.
- In much of Africa, Asia and the
Middle East, there is a strong consensus that belief in God is necessary for
morality and good values. Throughout much of Europe, however, majorities think
morality is possible without faith.
- Religiosity tends to be correlated
with wealth – in the poorer nations, religion
remains central to the lives of individuals, while secular perspectives are
more common in richer nations.
- Exceptions to this pattern are
strongly held religious beliefs in the United States and the oil-rich kingdom
of Kuwait.
- The publics of former Eastern bloc
counties are the least religious people in ‘middle income’ countries.
- Compared to much of the world¸
tolerant attitudes towards homosexuality prevail throughout Western Europe and
much of the Americas.
- The United States, Japan and Israel
stand apart from other wealthy nations on this issue – in each, less than half of the publics say homosexuality should be
accepted by society.
There is a global consensus on the
importance of education for both girls and boys, but divides on other gender
issues.
- There is less agreement that both
sexes make equally good political leaders, particularly in the Muslim world.
- And Muslims often oppose men and
women working together, but in 15 of the 16 Muslim publics surveyed, a majority
say women should have the right to decide whether they wear a veil.
Significant divides in opinion are
apparent in Muslim countries.
- At least a third of all Muslims in a
majority of the countries with large Muslim populations – including more than half in Lebanon and
Turkey – sees a struggle between Islamic
fundamentalists and those who want to modernize their countries.
- While most publics agree that
religion and politics do not mix, the trend is moving in opposite direction in
two major Muslim countries that are key allies of the United States. Support
for strict separation between religion and government is growing in Pakistan,
while in Turkey support for separation has declined significantly in the past
five years.
- Majorities in every Latin American,
Eastern European, and African country surveyed say women should choose their
own husbands, but publics in South Asia and in most Arab countries say a
woman’s family should choose whom she marries or that both should have a say.
Media and technology
- The world continues to turn to
television for news about international and national issues except in a few
African nations where radio is the primary source of information. Newspapers
continue to lose readers and trail far behind television as a news source.
- Online news sources are steadily
gaining in popularity in the West and parts of Asia but draw only a tiny
audience in Africa or Latin America.
- Americans, South Koreans and Czechs
go online for news considerably more often than people in other nations.
- Newspaper readership is also sharply
lower in the U.S. than in other advanced nations.
- Computer ownership has steadily
risen in the past five years, particularly in Eastern Europe. At the same time,
the gap between the world’s technologically advanced countries and less
developed nations has increased considerably.
- American internet use is markedly
higher than in most advanced nations – save Sweden
and South Korea.
- Cell phone ownership is increasing
at a dramatic pace in both the developed and developing worlds.
- Since 2002, cell phone ownership has
grown by 20 percentage points or more in 24 of the 35 countries where trend
data is available.
Methods
Results for the 47-country survey
are based on telephone and face-to-face interviews conducted under the
direction of Princeton Survey Research Associates International. Over 45,000
interviews were conducted in April-May, 2007. All results are based on national
samples except in Bolivia, Brazil, China, India, Ivory Coast, Pakistan, South
Africa, and Venezuela, where the samples were disproportionately or exclusively
urban. The margin of sampling error for the full sample in each country ranges
from plus or minus 2 percentage points to plus or minus 4 percentage points.
The full embargoed report is
available at http://pewglobal.org/reports/pdf/258.pdf.
(Genehmigung liegt vor)