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Differences in registering and voting between native-born and naturalized Americans

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Abstract

Relatively little is known about the differences in voting behavior between immigrantsand native-born Americans, primarily due to a lack of good quality data on the national level. Using data from the Voting and Registration Supplement to the November 1996 Current Population Survey (CPS), we examine whether variables known to affect electoral participation among the citizen population are also important among naturalized citizens. We find that naturalized citizens are less likely to register and to vote than native-born citizens, net of other factors. Citizens born abroad in Europe, Latin America, and Asia are less likely to register and those born abroad in Europe and Asia are less likely to vote than those born in the U.S. Among naturalized citizens, region of origin does not remain a major explanatory variable once time in the U.S. is considered.

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Bass, L.E., Casper, L.M. Differences in registering and voting between native-born and naturalized Americans. Population Research and Policy Review 20, 483–511 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1015635717294

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