Leonid Peisakhin | Who Helps Refugees and Why? Evidence from Poland
Our understanding of what motivates helping behavior toward refugees is incomplete, and much literature on migrants focuses on economic concerns over job competition and perceived cultural threat. We explore the determinants of refugee assistance from a nationally-representative survey of 2,500 Poles, whom we asked whether they have helped Syrian and Ukrainian refugees and are willing to assist them in the future. To get around social desirability biases we implement a conjoint experiment on refugee characteristics that elicits true preferences toward different types of refugees. We find that empathy is the primary driver of helping behavior. Importantly, the same set of factors determine the willingness to help both Syrians and Ukrainians. Cultural distance is among these, which is why Ukrainians, who are perceived as more proximate culturally, are, on average, more likely to be helped. Through a survey experiment we try to increase empathy by activating the memory of family suffering. This intervention fails, suggesting that it is difficult to manipulate empathy and, through it, helping behavior.
Dr. Leonid Peisakhin's research examines how political identities and persistent patterns of political behavior are created and manipulated by the state. He studies the longue-durée legacy of state-sponsored violence, and, as its corollary, the dynamics of post-conflict reconciliation, and the cultural legacies of historical political institutions.
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Encina Hall 2nd floor, William J. Perry Conference Room
Leonid Peisakhin
Leonid Peisakhin is Associate Professor of Political Science at New York University - Abu Dhabi. His research examines how political identities and persistent patterns of political behavior are created and manipulated by the state. He studies the longue-durée legacy of state-sponsored violence, and, as its corollary, the dynamics of post-conflict reconciliation, and the cultural legacies of historical political institutions. He is also interested in the influence of biased media and topics related to good governance.
At Stanford, Leonid Peisakhin will be working on completing ongoing book projects. In "Contested Nationhood: Imperial Legacies and Conflicting Political Identities in Ukraine", Peisakhin proposes that core group identities, defined as the primary source of behavioral queues, are most likely to persist because they are a crucial source of social meaning. The book project draws on a natural experiment of history that divided homogenous Ukrainian communities between Austrian and Russian empires and examines the roots of the competing notions of Ukrainian national identity and the consequences of the existence of these on present-day political life. In "Children of Violence: Victims in the Shadow of Violence" -- a joint project with Prof. Noam Lupu -- Peisakhin explores why different types of violence have different legacy effects.
Peisakhin's research combines multiple methods including experiments, surveys, ethnography, and archival research. He has done fieldwork in Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America, and the bulk of his work is focused on Eastern Europe.