Surveying Minoritized Citizens: A Quantitative Study of Identification Versus Categorization

Authors

  • Sanne van Oosten University of Oxford

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18148/srm/2026.v20i1.8334

Keywords:

survey design, migration background, population statistics, identification, categorization

Abstract

Survey research on minoritized citizens tends to categorize respondents from the top down, instead of allowing for identification from the bottom up. I surveyed 1864 respondents in Germany and the Netherlands, including 401 respondents with a background in Türkiye. I find that those who identify as Turkish often hold significantly different attitudes than those who have a background in Türkiye but who identify as German or Dutch. In fact, those who do not identify as Turkish, hold significantly different attitudes than when a researcher would categorize them as “having a migration background” and/or as “having a migration background in Türkiye.” I provide proof of this with attitudes towards topics often associated with citizens with a migration background. Beyond these empirical advantages to identification over categorization, this paper outlines additional theoretical, methodological and conceptual advantages to following an identification approach in designing surveys.

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Published

2026-04-10

How to Cite

van Oosten, S. (2026). Surveying Minoritized Citizens: A Quantitative Study of Identification Versus Categorization. Survey Research Methods, 20(1), 1–17. https://doi.org/10.18148/srm/2026.v20i1.8334

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