“…Unlike earlier realistic group conflict studies (Jackson, 1993; Meuleman et al, 2009; Quillian, 1996), the consensus arising from this more recent body of work is that rather than merely focusing on the effects of immigration itself as the driver of attitudes, broader sources of economic vulnerability prevalent across the population need to be considered (Pardos‐Prado & Xena, 2019; Pecoraro & Ruedin, 2016). Thus far, researchers have explored fears over prospective job loss threats caused by automation, offshoring and deindustrialisation as predictors of opposition to immigration (Dancygier & Walter, 2015; Kaihovaara & Im, 2020; Pardos‐Prado, 2020; Polavieja, 2016). Therefore, even if concrete material vulnerabilities may have less to do with the economic impact of immigration directly, there appear to be substantive economic roots of what we observe in Western democracies regarding a nationalistic turn in support for closure in immigration policy (Halikiopoulou & Vlandas, 2019; Mudde & Kaltwasser, 2018).…”