The Open Social Science Journal

2010, 3 : 60-67
Published online 2010 December 9. DOI: 10.2174/1874945301003010060
Publisher ID: TOSSCIJ-3-60

Attitudinal Predictors of Potential Illegal Cross-Border Migration

Reidar Ommundsen , Kees van der Veer , Krum Krumov , Plama Hristova , Silvia Ivanova , Damyana Ommundsen and Knud S. Larsen
University of Oslo, Forskningsveien 3A, 0373 Oslo, Norway.

ABSTRACT

This paper reports on the relationship between attitudes toward illegal immigrants and illegal immigration, and people’s private behavioural intention to immigrate illegally into a foreign country. The research was carried out in 2005, in Bulgaria, a country with a net emigration rate, using a sample of 505 undergraduate Bulgarian students (22.5% male; M age = 23.3; SD = 4.8). A pool of 78 items assessed attitudes toward undocumented immigrants and evaluation of illegal migration. These two measures were used to predict potential undocumented immigration. Based on a factor analysis six subscales were identified and labelled: improvement of life, moral evaluation, courage to live, failure experienced in own country, expectations of benefits from illegal migration, and right to immigrate. Results of a multiple regression analysis explained 62 percent of the variance of the behavioural intention to migrate illegally into a foreign country. The analysis yielded the following factors: attitudes to improve life (β = 0.35), the moral evaluation of illegal immigrants (β = -0.26), expectancies of benefits (β = -0.19), the courage of migrants (β = 0.10), and seeing illegal immigration as a right (β = 0.09), These findings support the hypothesis that attitudes may predict potential behaviour, the strongest predictor for undocumented migration being the urge to improve life, and moral evaluation of migrants.