BLACK CANDIDATES, WHITE VOTERS - UNDERSTANDING RACIAL BIAS IN POLITICAL PERCEPTIONS

被引:211
作者
SIGELMAN, CK
SIGELMAN, L
WALKOSZ, BJ
NITZ, M
机构
[1] MONTANA STATE UNIV,BILLINGS,MT
[2] UNIV ARIZONA,TUCSON,AZ 85721
关键词
D O I
10.2307/2111765
中图分类号
D0 [政治学、政治理论];
学科分类号
0302 ; 030201 ;
摘要
Theory: Social psychological theories of in-group responses to members of out-groups are used to generate hypotheses about the willingness of white voters to vote for minority candidates. Hypotheses: Eight different hypotheses about the impact on voting decisions of the candidate's race or ethnicity and the candidate's and voter's issue positions. Methods: Analysis of variance of data from an experiment with 656 Anglo adults in which the candidate's race-ethnicity and issue positions were manipulated. Results: Minority status enhanced the perception that moderate and conservative candidates would be compassionate toward disadvantaged groups but created doubts about a candidate's competence. Voters were no more or less likely to vote for black or Hispanic candidates than for Anglo candidates, possibly because the advantages of being perceived as compassionate were offset by the disadvantages of being stereotyped as unable to manage major policy issues. These findings supported no single theoretical perspective unequivocally, but suggested, in line with an ''assumed characteristics'' perspective that evaluations ultimately depend on what traits specific racial or ethnic stereotypes suggest minority groups members should have, what traits they do have, and what evaluative significance is attached to these assumed and individuated traits, as influenced by their desirability and correspondence with expectancy.
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页码:243 / 265
页数:23
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