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PERCENT BLACK AND RACIAL HOSTILITY: AN OLD ASSUMPTION REEXAMINED

A widely accepted but seldom examined generalization in the field of race relations is that a higher black concentration yields more negative racial attitudes. The study used aggregate- & individual-level data. The latter was taken from 1972 American Election Study of the Survey Research Center...

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Published in:Social science quarterly 1977-12, Vol.58 (3), p.412-417
Main Author: GILES, MICHEAL W.
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description A widely accepted but seldom examined generalization in the field of race relations is that a higher black concentration yields more negative racial attitudes. The study used aggregate- & individual-level data. The latter was taken from 1972 American Election Study of the Survey Research Center (SRC) at the U of Michigan. There were 1,884 white Rs who lived in 120 counties across the US. Combining survey & census data in a single analysis it is found that this relationship holds only for southern Rs. Outside the South, racial attitudes appear largely insensitive to the racial concentration. 1 Table. Modified AA.
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source Business Source Ultimate; JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; Periodicals Archive Online Foundation Collection; PAIS Index; Sociological Abstracts
subjects African American culture
African Americans
Black white relations
Black/Blacks
Current Research on Race and Ethnicity
Desegregation
Hostility
Hostility/Hostilities
Political attitudes
Prejudices
Race relations
Racism/Racist/Racists
Relations, race/Relations, racial (see also Race)
School desegregation
South/Southern
United States
United States/US
Voting
title PERCENT BLACK AND RACIAL HOSTILITY: AN OLD ASSUMPTION REEXAMINED
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