Racial Stratification and the Confederate Flag: Comparing Four Perspectives to Explain Flag Support
Autor: | Ryan D. Talbert, Evelyn J. Patterson |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
South carolina
030505 public health 050402 sociology White (horse) Sociology and Political Science business.industry 05 social sciences Public opinion Social stratification Odds 03 medical and health sciences 0504 sociology Anthropology Pacific islanders 0305 other medical science Public support Psychology business Flag (geometry) Demography |
Zdroj: | Race and Social Problems. 12:233-245 |
ISSN: | 1867-1756 1867-1748 |
Popis: | Recent events have brought attention to Confederate monuments positioned across the USA and polarized debates about their proper placement; however, prior research examining support for Confederate symbols is largely limited to white Americans. This study examines public support for the South Carolina Confederate flag using four perspectives of racial stratification—black/nonblack, combined race-ethnicity, ethnoracial pentagon, and nonwhite/white. Using data from two nationally representative surveys of noninstitutionalized US adults collected in 2000 and 2015 (n = 7638), we identify associations between theories of racial stratification and Confederate flag stances. Multiple model fit indices indicate that the combined race-ethnicity theory of racial stratification best mapped onto public support followed by the ethnoracial pentagon and black/nonblack perspectives. The nonwhite/white model exhibited the poorest fit. Findings from logistic regressions showed that whites had significantly higher odds of supporting the Confederate flag compared to blacks and Latinos. Additionally, blacks had lower odds of flag support than Latinos, Asian Americans, Native Americans, Pacific Islanders, and multiracial respondents. We argue that an overlooked aspect of Confederate monuments is their signified antiblackness demonstrated in this study by greater support for the flag among all nonblack racial-ethnic groups. Findings imply that prioritizing whites’ views in discussions of Confederate monuments offers an inadequate depiction of public opinion by race-ethnicity. Disaggregating views via the combined race-ethnicity measure highlights racial-ethnic variation in support of the South Carolina Confederate flag. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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