Evaluating Benefits of EU Membership

EU-Movers Attitudes Towards EU Membership of their Country of Residence and Country of Origin

Authors

  • Marc Friedli SciencesPo Paris / LSE

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5282/yjea/31

Keywords:

European integration, Public opinion, free movement, EU support, migration

Abstract

In the literature on public attitudes towards European integration, only few studies have focused on EU citizens living in a different Member State than they were born in. While data on this specific group are rare, the pro-Europeanness of EU-movers has been taken for granted, given that they make active use of and thus, profit from the right of free movement stemming from EU citizenship. This paper aims to fill this gap in the literature in two ways. On the one hand, it investigates how EU-movers evaluate the benefits of EU membership of their country of origin as well as country of residence. On the other hand, this paper compares movers’ attitudes to those of natives in their country of residence as well as stayers in their country of origin and asks whether EU-movers trust the EU more and evaluate EU membership as more beneficial. Drawing on Eurobarometer data, the conducted logistic regressions reveal that EU-movers are more likely to positively evaluate EU membership of their country of residence than natives, but less likely to do so for their country of origin when compared to stayers.

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Published

2021-09-30