学位论文详细信息
Black Republican Support in the Trump Era: A Social Psychological Account
African Americans;Black Americans;Blacks;racial identity;political identity;political parties;race and politics;SDO;social dominance orientation
Davis, Gregory K. ; Sidanius, Jim,Bobo, Lawrence,Mitchell, Jason
University:Havard University
Department:African and African American Studies
关键词: African Americans;    Black Americans;    Blacks;    racial identity;    political identity;    political parties;    race and politics;    SDO;    social dominance orientation;   
Others  :  https://dash.harvard.edu/bitstream/handle/1/37365784/DAVIS-DISSERTATION-2020.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
美国|英语
来源: Digital Access to Scholarship at Harvard
PDF
【 摘 要 】

For the past 60 years, less than 15% of the Black popular vote has gone to a Republican Presidential candidate. This trend started at the end of the Civil Rights Era and has been consistent for Republican candidates across the spectrum. In this Dissertation, I explore the social psychological variables that may explain this persistent voting behavior. Principally, I hypothesize that differences in racial identity – a multidimensional conception of how being Black relates to one’s self image – and Social Dominance Orientation – an individual’s preference for a group-based social hierarchy - are key to understanding which Black Americans support the Republican Party.Across three studies, I support my central hypotheses. In Study 1, I use panel survey data to show that racial identity significantly predicts support for Republicans in Congress as well as for President Donald Trump. In Study 2, I use random-assignment to assign participants to be low or high in racial identity. Therein, the manipulation condition directly predicts support for the GOP. In Study 3, I have participants focus on specific chapters of history between Black people and the Republican Party. Those who read about the “Southern Strategy” of anti-Black actions from Republicans were much less likely to support the Party than those who read about the founding of the GOP, which was more pro-Black. In all three studies, SDO partially mediates the relationship between racial identity and support for the Republicans. Implications and next steps for this research follow.

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
Black Republican Support in the Trump Era: A Social Psychological Account 3170KB PDF download
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:17次 浏览次数:28次