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Brown-Utility Heuristic? The Presence and Contributing Factors of Latino Linked Fate

In an electoral system governed by the plurality rule, those groups who wield the greatest amount of power in the United States are those who vote as a cohesive bloc. Although the size of the Latino population is growing, it is unclear whether all Latinos perceive a shared collective identity that w...

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Published in:Hispanic journal of behavioral sciences 2010-11, Vol.32 (4), p.519-531
Main Authors: Sanchez, Gabriel R., Masuoka, Natalie
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Language:English
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description In an electoral system governed by the plurality rule, those groups who wield the greatest amount of power in the United States are those who vote as a cohesive bloc. Although the size of the Latino population is growing, it is unclear whether all Latinos perceive a shared collective identity that will be exercised in the political realm. This study uses the Latino National Survey, a nationally representative telephone survey of 8,600 Latino adults, to examine how individual Latinos perceive their personal fates and the fate of their national origin group with the larger panethnic community. The authors utilize ordered logistic regression analysis to test their hypotheses regarding the impact of immigration experiences, race, and socioeconomic status on Latino linked fate. Results suggest that linked fate for Latinos may be a temporary phenomenon, as linked fate for Latinos appears to be based on marginalization derived from economic status and immigration experiences.
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source ERIC; Sage Journals Online; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Adults
Cultural identity
Economic Status
Group Identity
Heuristics
Hispanic Americans
Immigration
Influence
Latin American Cultural Groups
National Surveys
Power Structure
Qualitative research
Race
Racial identity
Regression (Statistics)
Regression analysis
Socioeconomic Status
State Surveys
Telephone Surveys
United States of America
Voting
Will
title Brown-Utility Heuristic? The Presence and Contributing Factors of Latino Linked Fate
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