Democratic Values? A Racial Group-Based Analysis of Core Political Values, Partisanship, and Ideology

被引:0
作者
David J. Ciuk
机构
[1] Franklin & Marshall College,Department of Government
来源
Political Behavior | 2017年 / 39卷
关键词
Core political values; Ideology; Partisanship; Race;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Research on American core political values, partisanship, and ideology often concludes that liberals and Democrats believe equality to be one of the most important values while conservatives and Republicans place greater emphasis on social order and moral traditionalism. Though these findings are valuable, it is assumed that they generalize across various groups (e.g. socioeconomic classes, religious groups, racial groups, etc.) in society. Focusing on racial groups in contemporary American politics, I challenge this assumption. More specifically, I argue that if individuals’ value preferences are formed during their pre-adult socialization years, and if the socialization process is different across racial groups, then it may be the case that members of different racial groups connect their value preferences to important political behaviors, including partisanship and ideology, in different ways as well. In the first part of this study, I fit a geometric model of value preferences to two different data sets—the first from 2010 and the second from 2002—and I show that although there is substantial value disagreement between white Democrats/liberals and Republicans/conservatives, that disagreement is smaller in Latinos and almost completely absent in African Americans. In the second part of this study, I demonstrate the political implications of these findings by estimating the effects of values on party and ideology, conditional on race. Results show that where whites’ value preferences affect their partisan and ideological group ties, the effects are smaller in Latinos and indistinguishable from zero in African Americans. I close by suggesting that scholars of values and political behavior ought to think in a more nuanced manner about how fundamental political cognitions relate to various attitudes and behaviors across different groups in society.
引用
收藏
页码:479 / 501
页数:22
相关论文
共 66 条
  • [1] Abrajano M(2008)The 2004 hispanic vote: Insecurity and moral concerns Journal of Politics 70 368-382
  • [2] Alvarez RM(1989)A schema-based approach to modeling an African-American racial belief system American Political Science Review 83 421-441
  • [3] Nagler J(1995)American ambivalence towards abortion policies: Development of a heteroskedastic probit model of competing values American Journal of Political Science 39 1055-1082
  • [4] Allen RL(1998)Values and voting Political Psychology 19 17-40
  • [5] Dawson MC(2006)Earthquakes and aftershocks: Race, direct democracy, and partisan change American Journal of Political Science 50 146-159
  • [6] Brown RE(2005)Understanding interaction models: Improving empirical analysis Political Analysis 13 1-20
  • [7] Alvarez RM(2003)The shifting foundations of public opinion about gay rights Journal of Politics 65 1208-1220
  • [8] Brehm J(2015)The new look in political ideology research Annual Review of Political Science 18 205-216
  • [9] Barnea MF(2016)Americans’ value preferences pre- and post-9/11 Social Science Quarterly 97 407-417
  • [10] Schwartz SH(2015)Checking for systematic value preferences using the method of triads Political Psychology 36 709-728