The use of racially charged imagery and messages has a long history in US politics. But how do such racial cues affect how Americans participate politically beyond holding opinions? In new research, Hans Hassell and Neil Visalvanich find that whites are less likely to participate politically when prompted by minority advocacy. They argue because of race’s influence on political motivation, political elites or interest groups could use racial priming to motivate or demotivate public political action, not just change political opinions
With more explicit forms of racism having declined in recent decades, the implicit racial attitudes ...
When are people more likely to evaluate race-targeted government assistance based on ideological pri...
We find ourselves at an important moment in American history, where candidates of color are both run...
Previous work on the effects of race on the political behaviors of white Americans is beset with two...
This dissertation assesses the conditions under which political elites can reshape individuals' part...
© 2016 by the Southern Political Science Association. All rights reserved. The prevailing theory on ...
The recent rise in explicitly prejudicial campaign messaging, along with the complementary rise in r...
We address the role of racial antagonism in whites’ opposition to racially-targeted policies. The da...
How do racial signals associating a candidate with minority supporters change voters’ perceptions ab...
This dissertation examines various racial appeals used by black and white candidates, Democrats and ...
The Implicit Explicit (IE) model of racial priming (Mendelberg 2001) continues to be the dominant th...
Since Barack Obama's presidential campaign of 2008, media outlets have changed how race is covered a...
The conventional wisdom is that racial attitudes, by forming through early socialization processes, ...
The use of racially charged imagery and messages has a long history in US politics. But how do such ...
In The Race Card (2001), Mendelberg finds support for her theory that implicit racial appeals, but n...
With more explicit forms of racism having declined in recent decades, the implicit racial attitudes ...
When are people more likely to evaluate race-targeted government assistance based on ideological pri...
We find ourselves at an important moment in American history, where candidates of color are both run...
Previous work on the effects of race on the political behaviors of white Americans is beset with two...
This dissertation assesses the conditions under which political elites can reshape individuals' part...
© 2016 by the Southern Political Science Association. All rights reserved. The prevailing theory on ...
The recent rise in explicitly prejudicial campaign messaging, along with the complementary rise in r...
We address the role of racial antagonism in whites’ opposition to racially-targeted policies. The da...
How do racial signals associating a candidate with minority supporters change voters’ perceptions ab...
This dissertation examines various racial appeals used by black and white candidates, Democrats and ...
The Implicit Explicit (IE) model of racial priming (Mendelberg 2001) continues to be the dominant th...
Since Barack Obama's presidential campaign of 2008, media outlets have changed how race is covered a...
The conventional wisdom is that racial attitudes, by forming through early socialization processes, ...
The use of racially charged imagery and messages has a long history in US politics. But how do such ...
In The Race Card (2001), Mendelberg finds support for her theory that implicit racial appeals, but n...
With more explicit forms of racism having declined in recent decades, the implicit racial attitudes ...
When are people more likely to evaluate race-targeted government assistance based on ideological pri...
We find ourselves at an important moment in American history, where candidates of color are both run...