My Group or Myself? How Black, Latino, and White Americans Choose a Neighborhood, Job, and Candidate when Personal and Group Interest Diverge

Amid growing inequality within racial and ethnic groups, how do Americans decide where to live, where to work, and for whom to vote? While previous research has examined racial patterns in voting decisions, it provides less insight into individual-level decisions about neighborhoods, candidates, and...

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Veröffentlicht in:Perspectives on politics 2021-12, Vol.19 (4), p.1184-1204
Hauptverfasser: Hochschild, Jennifer, Piston, Spencer, Weaver, Vesla Mae
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container_title Perspectives on politics
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creator Hochschild, Jennifer
Piston, Spencer
Weaver, Vesla Mae
description Amid growing inequality within racial and ethnic groups, how do Americans decide where to live, where to work, and for whom to vote? While previous research has examined racial patterns in voting decisions, it provides less insight into individual-level decisions about neighborhoods, candidates, and employment—even while these decisions also organize the political world. We theorize about the role of a key variable stratifying these individual-level decisions: education. To test our argument, we analyze nationally representative survey data and a new survey experiment that varies incentives to leave one’s racial group environment. We find that among Blacks and Latinos, but not whites, those with higher levels of formal education are disproportionately likely to respond to incentives to leave their own group. We conclude with reflections on the implications of this educational divide for intra-racial inequality.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Cambridge Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Asian Americans
Candidates
Congressional elections
Decision making
Decisions
Education
Employment
Ethnic groups
Experiments
Group dynamics
Higher education
Hispanic Americans
Incentives
Income inequality
Individual differences
Latin American cultural groups
Liberalism
Minority & ethnic groups
Neighborhoods
Parents & parenting
Political campaigns
Polls & surveys
Race
Racial inequality
Racism
Social exclusion
Voting
title My Group or Myself? How Black, Latino, and White Americans Choose a Neighborhood, Job, and Candidate when Personal and Group Interest Diverge
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