Anti-Immigrant Prejudice Scale
The Anti-Immigrant Prejudice Scale, developed by Thomas Pettigrew and Roel Meertens in 1995, measures prejudice toward immigrants along two dimensions: blatant prejudice, which is hot, close, and direct, expressing open rejection and perceived threat, and subtle prejudice, which is cool, distant, and indirect, expressing defense of traditional values, denial of positive emotion, and exaggeration of cultural difference. Built from national samples across western Europe, the scale captures the modern, socially acceptable face of anti-immigrant attitudes that overt-prejudice items miss, while its two-factor structure remains the subject of ongoing psychometric debate.
Source record
Citations copied verbatim from the method’s source record. No claim-level verification is inferred from them.
- Pettigrew, T. F., & Meertens, R. W. (1995). Subtle and Blatant Prejudice in Western Europe. European Journal of Social Psychology, 25(1), 57-75. · DOI 10.1002/ejsp.2420250106
- Arancibia-Martini, H., Ruiz, M. A., Blanco, A., & Cardenas, M. (2016). New Evidence of Construct Validity Problems for Pettigrew and Meertens' (1995) Blatant and Subtle Prejudice Scale. Psychological Reports, 118(2), 544-564. · DOI 10.1177/0033294116636988
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Related methods
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