What Predicts Perceived Discrimination Among White Americans? Findings From Two Nationally Representative Studies
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Date
2023
Authors
Journal Title
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Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
No
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Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
Many national or racial majority groups increasingly perceive discrimination against their group, despite objective indicators of advantage. The present studies simultaneously test three individual-level explanations of perceived discrimination among White Americans: system legitimizing beliefs, economic precarity, and group interest, in addition to corresponding predictors at the context (state) level. Using multilevel analysis, we analyzed nationally-representative data from the 2016 American National Election Survey (N = 2631)-an election period marked by discourse about majority group grievances. Results showed that, at the individual level, system-legitimizing beliefs (symbolic racism, conservatism, realistic, and symbolic threat) predicted perceived discrimination among Whites, as did objective (income) and subjective (perceived financial insecurity) economic precarity. Conversely, group interest (indicated by White racial identification) was not a significant predictor. At the state level, support for the Republican candidate also predicted perceived discrimination. These findings replicated with data from the 2012 American National Election Survey (N = 3261). We discuss the implications of White Americans' discrimination claims in the current socio-political climate.
Description
Keywords
White identity, Perceived discrimination, White americans, Relative gratification, Conservatism, Affirmative-action, Threat, Perceptions, Deprivation, Racial progress, Trump support, Us, Legitimizing beliefs, Identity, Impact, Economic precarity
Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL
Fields of Science
05 social sciences, 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Citation
Okuyan, M., Vollhardt, J. R., & Stewart, A. (2023). What predicts perceived discrimination among white Americans? Findings from two nationally representative studies. Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy, 23(1), 45-72.
WoS Q
Q2
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OpenCitations Citation Count
2
Source
Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy
Volume
23
Issue
Start Page
45
End Page
72
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Scopus : 5
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Mendeley Readers : 2
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5
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Web of Science™ Citations
5
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Page Views
243
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Downloads
21
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