The Relationship Between Racial Attitudes and Perceived Economic Threat Among Whites: A Three Study Analysis

被引:2
|
作者
Lindsay, Spencer [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Notre Dame, Polit Sci, 2060 Nanovic Hall, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA
关键词
racial attitudes; group conflict; partisanship; economic threat; symbolic threat; SELF-INTEREST; AFFIRMATIVE-ACTION; SYMBOLIC RACISM; OLD HYPOTHESIS; ANTI-IMMIGRANT; OPPOSITION; BELIEFS; PREJUDICE; PARTISAN; TRUMP;
D O I
10.1177/1532673X221110038
中图分类号
D0 [政治学、政治理论];
学科分类号
0302 ; 030201 ;
摘要
Multiple theoretical orientations propose a link between economic anxiety and racial attitudes. This article explores this link using three studies. The first study uses observational data from the 2016 CCES and ANES to determine whether or not anticipating a loss in income in the coming year is associated with negative racial affect. The second study uses observational data from the 2020 CCES to determine whether or not perceiving a greater risk of personal discrimination is associated with racial resentment. The last uses an original survey experiment from the 2020 CCES to gain insight into how priming intergroup competition shapes whites' racial attitudes. These studies find an association between perceived economic threat and negative racial attitudes. However, the way respondents perceive economic threats seems to be largely shaped by partisan identification with Republicans perceiving greater levels of threat. They also suggest that material and symbolic threats may be mutually reinforcing. These findings support the claim that racial attitudes are deeply connected to economic anxieties and provide insight into how party identification shapes our psychology.
引用
收藏
页码:279 / 298
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Individual threat, group threat, and racial policy: Exploring the relationship between threat and racial attitudes
    Rosenstein, Judith E.
    [J]. SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH, 2008, 37 (04) : 1130 - 1146
  • [2] RECONSIDERING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PERCEIVED NEIGHBORHOOD RACIAL COMPOSITION AND WHITES' PERCEPTIONS OF VICTIMIZATION RISK: DO RACIAL STEREOTYPES MATTER?
    Pickett, Justin T.
    Chiricos, Ted
    Golden, Kristin M.
    Gertz, Marc
    [J]. CRIMINOLOGY, 2012, 50 (01) : 145 - 186
  • [3] Perceptions of economic and behavioral differences between blacks and whites: Racial attitudes of white Americans and status generalization
    Kaplowitz, Stan A.
    Broman, Clifford L.
    Fisher, Bradley J.
    [J]. SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY QUARTERLY, 2006, 69 (04) : 367 - 379
  • [4] CONSERVATISM, RACIAL INTOLERANCE, AND ATTITUDES TOWARD RACIAL ASSIMILATION AMONG WHITES AND AMERICAN INDIANS
    BAHR, HM
    CHADWICK, BA
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1974, 94 (01): : 45 - 56
  • [5] Relationship between perceived threat of COVID-19 and burnout among frontline nurses: A mediation analysis
    Gisilanbe Vetbuje, Benard
    Farmanesh, Panteha
    Sousan, Arman
    [J]. BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR, 2022, 12 (06):
  • [6] The Relationship of Employment Scarcity and Perceived Threat With Ageist and Sexist Attitudes
    Ospina, Javier H.
    Cleveland, Jeanette N.
    Gibbons, Alyssa M.
    [J]. WORK AGING AND RETIREMENT, 2019, 5 (03) : 215 - 235
  • [7] Implicit-explicit discrepancies regarding racial attitudes among US Whites
    Gonzalez, Frank J.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2023,
  • [8] The effects of perceived phenotypic racial stereotypicality and social identity threat on racial minorities' attitudes about police
    Kahn, Kimberly Barsamian
    Lee, J. Katherine
    Renauer, Brian
    Henning, Kris R.
    Stewart, Greg
    [J]. JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2017, 157 (04): : 416 - 428
  • [9] Post-hurricane Katrina racialized explanations as a system threat: Implications for Whites' and Blacks' racial attitudes
    Kaiser, Cheryl R.
    Eccleston, Collette P.
    Hagiwara, Nao
    [J]. SOCIAL JUSTICE RESEARCH, 2008, 21 (02) : 192 - 203
  • [10] Perceived Immigrant Threat and Punitive Attitudes: The Moderating Effect of Economic Insecurity
    Trahan, Adam
    Pierce, Kelly
    [J]. CRIME & DELINQUENCY, 2022, 68 (04) : 499 - 525