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Migrant Integration Index/Evidence
Method evidence record

Migrant Integration Index

The migrant integration index developed by Harder, Hainmueller, Laitin and colleagues in 2018 is a short, validated survey instrument that measures how integrated an individual immigrant is across six distinct dimensions: psychological, economic, political, social, linguistic, and navigational. Earlier integration research suffered from a proliferation of ad hoc, single-dimension proxies — employment alone, or language alone — that were not comparable across studies, groups, or countries. The IPL index, named for Stanford's Immigration Policy Lab, instead defines integration as inherently multidimensional and provides standardized batteries — a twelve-item short form (IPL-12) and a twenty-four-item long form (IPL-24) — that aggregate the six dimensions into a single, comparable score for each person. Critically, the instrument is designed and validated psychometrically, with the short form shown to track the long form and external outcomes closely, so researchers can capture the full breadth of integration in just a few minutes of survey time. The result is a portable, individual-level measurement tool that brings consistency to a field long fragmented by incommensurable indicators.

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Source record

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Multidimensional Migrant Integration Index (IPL Survey Measure)
Taxonomic method record · latent-structure / migration-studies
  • Harder, N., Figueroa, L., Gillum, R. M., Hangartner, D., Laitin, D. D., & Hainmueller, J. (2018). Multidimensional Measure of Immigrant Integration. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 115(45), 11483-11488. · DOI 10.1073/pnas.1808793115
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Related methods

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Used in the same domainMigrant Integration Policy Indexmachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.Used in the same domainSpatial Assimilation Modelmachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.Used in the same domainTransnationalism Survey Measurementmachine-suggested · Relational suggestion, not evidence.

Evidence status

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Sources

1 recorded citation, copied from the method source record.

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