Research

Disfavor or Favor? Assessing the Valence of White Americans’ Racial Attitudes

With Alexander Agadjanian, John Carey, and Timothy Ryan, Quarterly Journal of Political Science

Diversity, Identity & DiscriminationPublished ArticleEnglishStudent project: Dartmouth
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Abstract

When individuals’ racial attitudes are associated with their judgments related to race — for example, when people with more negative attitudes toward Blacks are less likely to vote for a Black political candidate — existing studies routinely interpret it as evidence of prejudice against minorities. But theoretically, such associations can represent favoring minorities, disfavoring them, or a combination of both. We provide a conceptual framework to distinguish patterns of favoring and disfavoring against a standard of racial indifference, and test it with a preregistered conjoint experiment. In our results, one widely used measure — the Racial Resentment Scale — captures favoring of Blacks substantially more than disfavoring. This finding calls for greater care in characterizing white Americans’ racial attitudes and illustrates ways to improve future research designs. We also describe several extensions that integrate the distinction between favoring and disfavoring into the broader study of racial attitudes.

Abstract source: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00021119

Citation

Agadjanian, Alexander, John Carey, Yusaku Horiuchi, and Timothy J. Ryan. 2023. “Disfavor or Favor? Assessing the Valence of White Americans’ Racial Attitudes.” Quarterly Journal of Political Science 18(1): 75–103. https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00021119

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