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1
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51249109091
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Here, racial alignment refers merely to the distribution of voters by race across the two parties. We accept the criticisms of the traditional concept of realignment. Edward. G. Carmines and James A. Stimson, Issue Evolution: Race and the Transformation of American Politics (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1989), 21-26;
-
Here, "racial alignment" refers merely to the distribution of voters by race across the two parties. We accept the criticisms of the traditional concept of "realignment." Edward. G. Carmines and James A. Stimson, Issue Evolution: Race and the Transformation of American Politics (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1989), 21-26;
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3
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51249085011
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Black and Merle Black
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On the gradual sorting of southern whites, see, e.g, Cambridge: Harvard University Press
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On the gradual sorting of southern whites, see, e.g., Earl. Black and Merle Black, The Rise of Southern. Republicanism (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2003),
-
(2003)
The Rise of Southern. Republicanism
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Earl1
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4
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0141439235
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New Haven: Yale University Press, ch. 6. On the role of class in American party alignments
-
and Donald Green, Bradley Palmquist, and Eric Schickler, Partisan Hearts & Minds: Political Parties and the Social Identities of Voters (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2002), ch. 6. On the role of class in American party alignments,
-
(2002)
Partisan Hearts & Minds: Political Parties and the Social Identities of Voters
-
-
Green, D.1
Palmquist, B.2
Schickler, E.3
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7
-
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85127448659
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Jeffrey Stonecash, Mark D. Brewer; R. Eric Petersen, et al., Class and Party: Secular Realignment and the Survival of Democrats Outside the South, Political Research Quarterly 53 (2000): 731-52.
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Jeffrey Stonecash, Mark D. Brewer; R. Eric Petersen, et al., "Class and Party: Secular Realignment and the Survival of Democrats Outside the South," Political Research Quarterly 53 (2000): 731-52.
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8
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0004152438
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On the demise of the New Deal coalition, see Steve Fraser and Gary Gerstle, eds, Princeton: Princeton University Press
-
On the demise of the New Deal coalition, see Steve Fraser and Gary Gerstle, eds., The Rise and Fall of the New Deal Order (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1989).
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(1989)
The Rise and Fall of the New Deal Order
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9
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51249123784
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Our usage of the terms racial liberalism and racial conservatism is broadly consistent with the usage in Carmines and Stimson
-
Our usage of the terms "racial liberalism" and "racial conservatism" is broadly consistent with the usage in Carmines and Stimson.
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10
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51249093476
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As Richard Valelly points out, the U.S. stands alone among democratic polities in having enfranchised, disenfranchised, and reenfranchised groups of its citizens
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As Richard Valelly points out, the U.S. stands alone among democratic polities in having enfranchised, disenfranchised, and reenfranchised groups of its citizens.
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12
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51249089496
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, xii, 141, 154, 160. The issue evolution theory is extended in James A. Stimson, Tides of Consent: How Public Opinion Shapes American Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), ch. 3.
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, xii, 141, 154, 160. The issue evolution theory is extended in James A. Stimson, Tides of Consent: How Public Opinion Shapes American Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), ch. 3.
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13
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51249100247
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Carmines and Stimson
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42
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Qtd. in Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, 42.
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Issue Evolution
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Qtd1
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14
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51249109509
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, xi-xii, 42, 45, 47; New York Times, 13 May 1964, 1, 22; 21 June 1964, 1;
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, xi-xii, 42, 45, 47; New York Times, 13 May 1964, 1, 22; 21 June 1964, 1;
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15
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51249094955
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Rick Perlstein, Before the Strom: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus (New York: Hill and Wang, 2001), 868-4, The view that the year 1964 was causally critical for producing the contemporary sorting out of voters into parties is advanced by the vast majority of political scientists and historians writing on the subject.
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Rick Perlstein, Before the Strom: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus (New York: Hill and Wang, 2001), 868-4, The view that the year 1964 was causally "critical" for producing the contemporary sorting out of voters into parties is advanced by the vast majority of political scientists and historians writing on the subject.
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16
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51249104069
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution.
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution.
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18
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51249083723
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, 184-85, 190.
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, 184-85, 190.
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19
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51249083945
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, 134, 150-156;
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, 134, 150-156;
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20
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51249109745
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Thomas Byrne Edsall with Mary D. Edsall, Chain Reaction: The Impact of Race, Rights, and Taxes on American Politics, rev. ed. (New York: Norton, 1992), 7.
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Thomas Byrne Edsall with Mary D. Edsall, Chain Reaction: The Impact of Race, Rights, and Taxes on American Politics, rev. ed. (New York: Norton, 1992), 7.
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21
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51249104068
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The potential for mobilizing white ethnics via law and order appeals began earlier than usually appreciated. Indeed, during the summer of 1964, observers referred to crowd disturbances involving blacks as Goldwater rallies. Jeremy D. Mayer, LBJ Fights the White Backlash: The Racial Politics of the 1964 Presidential Campaign, Prologue 33 (Spring 2001), accessed online at http://www.archives.gov/ publications/prologue.html.
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The potential for mobilizing white ethnics via "law and order" appeals began earlier than usually appreciated. Indeed, during the summer of 1964, observers referred to crowd disturbances involving blacks as "Goldwater rallies." Jeremy D. Mayer, "LBJ Fights the White Backlash: The Racial Politics of the 1964 Presidential Campaign," Prologue 33 (Spring 2001), accessed online at http://www.archives.gov/ publications/prologue.html.
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22
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51249122249
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On the increasing prominence of law and order rhetoric tied to racial politics in Republican forums before 1964, see Perlstein, Before the Storm.
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On the increasing prominence of "law and order" rhetoric tied to racial politics in Republican forums before 1964, see Perlstein, Before the Storm.
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23
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51249115658
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, 190.
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, 190.
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24
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51249093697
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, 117, 134.
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, 117, 134.
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25
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51249090143
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, 16, 134, 150-56, 161.
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, 16, 134, 150-56, 161.
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26
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0003922114
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The emphasis on elites is not unique to Carmines and Stimson or Edsall and Edsall. For instance, elite racial appeals are granted equally significant causal weight in explaining a variety of electoral outcomes. See, Princeton: Princeton University Press
-
The emphasis on elites is not unique to Carmines and Stimson or Edsall and Edsall. For instance, elite racial appeals are granted equally significant causal weight in explaining a variety of electoral outcomes. See Tali Mendelberg, The Race Card: Campaign Strategy, Implicit Messages, and the Norm of Equality (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001).
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(2001)
The Race Card: Campaign Strategy, Implicit Messages, and the Norm of Equality
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Mendelberg, T.1
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27
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51249124471
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This contingency is, of course, a necessary corollary of the emphasis on elite agency-different elite choices can produce different paths to different alignments
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This contingency is, of course, a necessary corollary of the emphasis on elite agency-different elite choices can produce different paths to different alignments.
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28
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51249117871
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, 9, II, 186. Carmines and Stimson declare themselves intellectually at war ... with any notion of inevitability. They encounter no situations in the political evolution of race where ... it could only have happened as it did. They describe their scenarios, instead, as ... more akin to Tolstoy battle scenes, where calculation, force, confusion, and chance commingle to produce an outcome, the appearance of which is only orderly after the fact. Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, 16, 18.
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, 9, II, 186. Carmines and Stimson declare themselves "intellectually at war ... with any notion of inevitability." They "encounter no situations in the political evolution of race where ... it could only have happened as it did." They describe their scenarios, instead, as "... more akin to Tolstoy battle scenes, where calculation, force, confusion, and chance commingle to produce an outcome, the appearance of which is only orderly after the fact." Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, 16, 18.
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29
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51249116937
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Leading statements of the occurrence of an important white backlash include: Edsall with Edsall, Chain Reaction; Allen Matusow, The Unraveling of America: A History of Liberalism in the 1960s (New York: Harper & Row, 1984), Abigail and Stephen Thernstrom, America in Black and White: One Nation, Indivisible (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1997), and Jonathan Rieder, Canarsie: The Jews and Italians of Brooklyn Against Liberalism (Cambridge: Harvard. University Press, 1985).
-
Leading statements of the occurrence of an important "white backlash" include: Edsall with Edsall, Chain Reaction; Allen Matusow, The Unraveling of America: A History of Liberalism in the 1960s (New York: Harper & Row, 1984), Abigail and Stephen Thernstrom, America in Black and White: One Nation, Indivisible (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1997), and Jonathan Rieder, Canarsie: The Jews and Italians of Brooklyn Against Liberalism (Cambridge: Harvard. University Press, 1985).
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30
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51249118132
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Political scientists and historians have employed, a white backlash frame to interpret other episodes throughout the twentieth century, including struggles over the FEPC; school desegregation cases; white (and especially southern) mass response to the passage of landmark civil rights legislation; welfare policies and welfare dependency; and, most recently, affirmative action in hiring and higher education.
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Political scientists and historians have employed, a "white backlash" frame to interpret other episodes throughout the twentieth century, including struggles over the FEPC; school desegregation cases; white (and especially southern) mass response to the passage of landmark civil rights legislation; welfare policies and "welfare dependency;" and, most recently, affirmative action in hiring and higher education.
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34
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51249086696
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Stimson argues that we must accept as reasonable the possibility that in the early 1970s, feminist activists-many of them involved in other ostensibly leftist causes-could have entered the Republican party and taken others with them. Stimson, Tides of Consent, 68.
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Stimson argues that we must accept as reasonable the possibility that in the early 1970s, feminist activists-many of them involved in other ostensibly leftist causes-could have entered the Republican party and taken others with them. Stimson, Tides of Consent, 68.
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37
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0001531904
-
Massive Resistance in the Urban. North: Trumbull Park, Chicago, 1953-1966
-
and Arnold R. Hirsch, "Massive Resistance in the Urban. North: Trumbull Park, Chicago, 1953-1966," Journal of American History 82 (1995): 522-550;
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(1995)
Journal of American History
, vol.82
, pp. 522-550
-
-
Hirsch, A.R.1
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43
-
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51249092632
-
-
Sidney A. Fine, Expanding the Frontiers of Civil Rights: Michigan, 1948-1968 (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2000). This paragraph draws on Daniel T. Kryder and Robert W Mickey, The Politics of Backlash: Consequences of a Metaphor (unpublished manuscript in the authors' possession), as well as Anthony S. Chen, From Fair Employment to Equal Employment Opportunity and Beyond, (PhD diss., University of California, Berkeley, 2002), 275-95.
-
Sidney A. Fine, Expanding the Frontiers of Civil Rights: Michigan, 1948-1968 (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2000). This paragraph draws on Daniel T. Kryder and Robert W Mickey, "The Politics of Backlash: Consequences of a Metaphor" (unpublished manuscript in the authors' possession), as well as Anthony S. Chen, "From Fair Employment to Equal Employment Opportunity and Beyond," (PhD diss., University of California, Berkeley, 2002), 275-95.
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45
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51249113898
-
-
See also Crabgrass-Roots Politics: Race, Rights, and the Reaction Against Liberalism in the Urban North, 1940-1964, Journal of American History 82 (1995): 551-78.
-
See also "Crabgrass-Roots Politics: Race, Rights, and the Reaction Against Liberalism in the Urban North, 1940-1964," Journal of American History 82 (1995): 551-78.
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-
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46
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84884078473
-
-
Princeton University Press, forthcoming
-
Anthony S. Chen, The Fifth Freedom: Jobs, Politics, and, Civil Rights in the United States, 1941-1972 (Princeton University Press, forthcoming);
-
The Fifth Freedom: Jobs, Politics, and, Civil Rights in the United States, 1941-1972
-
-
Chen, A.S.1
-
47
-
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34547183903
-
-
also see Anthony S. Chen, The Party of Lincoln and the Politics of State Fair Employment Practices Legislation in the North, 1945-1964, American Journal of Sociology 112 (2007): 1713-74,
-
also see Anthony S. Chen, "The Party of Lincoln and the Politics of State Fair Employment Practices Legislation in the North, 1945-1964," American Journal of Sociology 112 (2007): 1713-74,
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48
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34547187884
-
-
and Anthony S. Chen, 'The Hitlerian Rule of Quotas': Racial Conservatism and the Politics of Fair Employment Practice Legislation in New York State, 1941-1945, Journal, of American History 92 (2006): 1238-64, The seminal on the politics of state civil rights legislation is Lockard, 'Ibward Equal Opportunity.
-
and Anthony S. Chen, "'The Hitlerian Rule of Quotas': Racial Conservatism and the Politics of Fair Employment Practice Legislation in New York State, 1941-1945," Journal, of American History 92 (2006): 1238-64, The seminal volume on the politics of state civil rights legislation is Lockard, 'Ibward Equal Opportunity.
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49
-
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0012377401
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The Relationship between Party Control and Civil Rights Legislation in the States
-
But see also
-
But see also Robert S. Erikson, "The Relationship between Party Control and Civil Rights Legislation in the States," Western Political Quarterly 24 (1971): 178-182;
-
(1971)
Western Political Quarterly
, vol.24
, pp. 178-182
-
-
Erikson, R.S.1
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50
-
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0037229444
-
The Political Economy of State-Level. Fair-Employment Laws, 1940-1964
-
William J, Collins, "The Political Economy of State-Level. Fair-Employment Laws, 1940-1964," Explorations in Economic History (2003): 24-51.
-
(2003)
Explorations in Economic History
, pp. 24-51
-
-
William, J.1
Collins2
-
51
-
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51249103853
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-
Daniel T. Kryder and Robert W. Mickey, The Politics of Backlash; Anthony S. Chen, From Fair Employment to Equal Employment Opportunity and Beyond, 275-295;
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Daniel T. Kryder and Robert W. Mickey, "The Politics of Backlash"; Anthony S. Chen, "From Fair Employment to Equal Employment Opportunity and Beyond," 275-295;
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-
-
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53
-
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0001905511
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Cleavage Structures, Party Systems, and Voter Alignments
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See, e.g, ed. Lipset and Rokkan New York: Free Press
-
See, e.g., Seymour Martin Lipset and Stein Rokkan, "Cleavage Structures, Party Systems, and Voter Alignments," in Party Systems and Voter Alignments: Cross-National Perspectives, ed. Lipset and Rokkan (New York: Free Press, 1967), 1-64.
-
(1967)
Party Systems and Voter Alignments: Cross-National Perspectives
, pp. 1-64
-
-
Martin Lipset, S.1
Rokkan, S.2
-
55
-
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68249122240
-
What's the Matter with What's the Matter with Kansas? Quarterly
-
Larry M. Bartels, "What's the Matter with What's the Matter with Kansas?" Quarterly Journal of Political Science 1 (2006) : 201-26.
-
(2006)
Journal of Political Science
, vol.1
, pp. 201-226
-
-
Bartels, L.M.1
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56
-
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84974270277
-
Group Components and of the Presidential Vote, 1952-1984
-
Also see
-
Also see Robert S. Erikson, Thomas D. Lancaster, and David W. Romero, "Group Components and of the Presidential Vote, 1952-1984," Journal of Politics 51 (1989): 337-46.
-
(1989)
Journal of Politics
, vol.51
, pp. 337-346
-
-
Erikson, R.S.1
Lancaster, T.D.2
Romero, D.W.3
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58
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51249102177
-
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unpublished manuscript. Karol also shows that nonsouthern Democratic congressional representatives began voting (slightly) more liberally than Republicans on civil rights proposals as early as the
-
David Karol, Coalition Management: Explaining Party Position Change in American Politics, unpublished manuscript. Karol also shows that nonsouthern Democratic congressional representatives began voting (slightly) more liberally than Republicans on civil rights proposals as early as the 1940s.
-
(1940)
Coalition Management: Explaining Party Position Change in American Politics
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Karol, D.1
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60
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84884009475
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Issue Evolution Reconsidered: Racial Attitudes and Partisanship in the U.S. Electorate
-
For an important critique, see
-
For an important critique, see Alan I. Abramowitz, "Issue Evolution Reconsidered: Racial Attitudes and Partisanship in the U.S. Electorate," American Journal of Political Science 38 (1994) : 1-24.
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(1994)
American Journal of Political Science
, vol.38
, pp. 1-24
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Abramowitz, A.I.1
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61
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51249123132
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, 189.
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Carmines and Stimson, Issue Evolution, 189.
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62
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51249095178
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Otherwise, an alternative perspective-that the alignment we have today was structurally determined by class cleavages-would still be a live option
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Otherwise, an alternative perspective-that the alignment we have today was structurally determined by class cleavages-would still be a live option.
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63
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51249089283
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Moreover, in the twentieth century, public sector employment has been of great importance to black America
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Moreover, in the twentieth century, public sector employment has been of great importance to black America.
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64
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51249107564
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Of course, relative to other democratic polities, the mid point of the left-right dimension in the United States through most of its history has been on the right. Still, the distance between the two major parties has been persistent, and the parties have often been polarized on this dimension. Gerring, Parly Ideologies in America
-
Of course, relative to other democratic polities, the mid point of the left-right dimension in the United States through most of its history has been on the right. Still, the distance between the two major parties has been persistent, and the parties have often been polarized on this dimension. Gerring, Parly Ideologies in America.
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65
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51249084810
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Given the black American experience with southern state governments, as well as the fact that federalism effectively disempowers subnational governments from redistributing income, it is understandable that black America's target, and dim hope, has been the federal government, Mickey, Paths Out of Dixie, ch. 2;
-
Given the black American experience with southern state governments, as well as the fact that federalism effectively disempowers subnational governments from redistributing income, it is understandable that black America's target, and dim hope, has been the federal government, Mickey, Paths Out of Dixie, ch. 2;
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66
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0004231661
-
-
Chicago: University of Chicago Press
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Paul E. Peterson, City Limits (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1981);
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(1981)
City Limits
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-
Peterson, P.E.1
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68
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0003925842
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Princeton: Princeton University Press
-
Michael Dawson, Behind the Mule (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1993).
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(1993)
Behind the Mule
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Dawson, M.1
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69
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51249124241
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-
However mistily Americans now conjure up the 1963 march on Washington as a call for children of all races to play together, the march was, at the time, a march for jobs and justice.
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However mistily Americans now conjure up the 1963 march on Washington as a call for children of all races to play together, the march was, at the time, a march for "jobs and justice."
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-
-
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70
-
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51249089066
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On the specific importance of the Second World War to racial politics and the rise of the civil rights movement, see, among many others, Merl E. Reed, Seedtime for the Modern Civil Rights Movement: The President's Committee on Fair Employment Practice, 1941-1946 Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1991
-
On the specific importance of the Second World War to racial politics and the rise of the civil rights movement, see, among many others, Merl E. Reed, Seedtime for the Modern Civil Rights Movement: The President's Committee on Fair Employment Practice, 1941-1946 (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1991),
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72
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51249092400
-
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A different incarnation of the first scenario is that Republican elites call for civic and social equality, and Democratic elites do as well. The parties then split the racially liberal vote. But this incarnation falls prey to the same problem as the previous one, The GOP could not have limited itself to supporting just civic and social equality, as it would have put them at a competitive disadvantage with Democrats. There would have been pressure for them to support all three types of equality
-
A different incarnation of the first scenario is that Republican elites call for civic and social equality, and Democratic elites do as well. The parties then split the racially liberal vote. But this incarnation falls prey to the same problem as the previous one, The GOP could not have limited itself to supporting just civic and social equality, as it would have put them at a competitive disadvantage with Democrats. There would have been pressure for them to support all three types of equality.
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-
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74
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51249106911
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Feinstein and Schickler, Parties and Platforms.
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Feinstein and Schickler, "Parties and Platforms."
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75
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51249088835
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Meanwhile, racial conservatives would have had a difficult time finding a partisan home, and it is possible there would have been a sustained effort to launch a third party
-
Meanwhile, racial conservatives would have had a difficult time finding a partisan home, and it is possible there would have been a sustained effort to launch a third party.
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77
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51249110392
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It bears mentioning that Carmines and Stimson (Issue Evolution, 150) do offer some evidence on the racial politics of Republican voters in the mid-1960s. Drawing on a time series constructed out of data from the National Election Studies and the Harris Poll, they find that Republican and Democratic identifiers held very similar racial attitudes through. 1962. In fact, Republicans had been more liberal than Democrats since 1955. It was only in 1963 to 1964, after Kennedy's introduction of civil rights legislation and Goldwater's rejection of it, that Republicans became much more conservative than Democrats. However, their measure of racial attitudes is problematic because it is based on survey items about desegregation. Because racial segregation was largely identified with the South, Republicans had no problem expressing their disdain for the practice. It did not seem to implicate any Republican constituencies, which were located mostly in the North, and criticizing segregation
-
It bears mentioning that Carmines and Stimson (Issue Evolution, 150) do offer some evidence on the racial politics of Republican voters in the mid-1960s. Drawing on a time series constructed out of data from the National Election Studies and the Harris Poll, they find that Republican and Democratic identifiers held very similar racial attitudes through. 1962. In fact, Republicans had been more liberal than Democrats since 1955. It was only in 1963 to 1964, after Kennedy's introduction of civil rights legislation and Goldwater's rejection of it, that Republicans became much more conservative than Democrats. However, their measure of racial attitudes is problematic because it is based on survey items about desegregation. Because racial segregation was largely identified with the South, Republicans had no problem expressing their disdain for the practice. It did not seem to implicate any Republican constituencies, which were located mostly in the North, and criticizing segregation would only exacerbate tensions between the southern and northern wing of the Democratic Party. In point of fact, criticizing segregation could conceivably heighten their partisan advantage ewer Democrats by exposing them for their contradictory stance. A different source of data is needed to make valid inferences about the racial attitudes of Republican voters. We enumerate the features of such data below.
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78
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51249112242
-
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This feature of the case is also useful for assessing the claim that the opposition of nonsouthern whites to civil rights (i.e, white backlash) was triggered by the radicalization of the civil rights agenda. Also worth pointing out is that blacks exercised the franchise in northern states before 1964
-
This feature of the case is also useful for assessing the claim that the opposition of nonsouthern whites to civil rights (i.e., white backlash) was triggered by the radicalization of the civil rights agenda. Also worth pointing out is that blacks exercised the franchise in northern states before 1964.
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79
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51249104288
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Matthew Lassiterhas argued that the distinction between de facto and de jure segregation has blurred over time; he also argues that it was a false dichotomy even for much of the postwar period.
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Matthew Lassiterhas argued that the distinction between de facto and de jure segregation has blurred over time; he also argues that it was a false dichotomy even for much of the postwar period.
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81
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51249120324
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We agree with many aspects of his analysis. Our reference to de jure segregation is simply meant to point out that the racial politics of Republican voters are difficult to measure if poll respondents were asked to express their opinion about practices that were identified by much of the public as distinctively southern. This identification was certainly contestable. After a number of speaking engagements in the North, Alabama Governor George Wallace remarked, with wonder and glee, The whole United States is Southern! Charles M. Payne, 'The Whole United States is Southern!' Brown v. Board and the Mystification of Race, Journal of American History 91 (2004): 83-91.
-
We agree with many aspects of his analysis. Our reference to de jure segregation is simply meant to point out that the racial politics of Republican voters are difficult to measure if poll respondents were asked to express their opinion about practices that were identified by much of the public as distinctively southern. This identification was certainly contestable. After a number of speaking engagements in the North, Alabama Governor George Wallace remarked, with wonder and glee, "The whole United States is Southern!" Charles M. Payne, "'The Whole United States is Southern!' Brown v. Board and the Mystification of Race," Journal of American History 91 (2004): 83-91.
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Kevin Allen Leonard, 'Years of Hope, Days of Fear: The Impact of World War II on Race Relations in Los Angeles, (PhD diss., Department of History, University of California, Davis, 1992), 328;
-
Kevin Allen Leonard, 'Years of Hope, Days of Fear: The Impact of World War II on Race Relations in Los Angeles," (PhD diss., Department of History, University of California, Davis, 1992), 328;
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90
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0038591083
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Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
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Daniel T. Kryder, Divided Arsenal (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000).
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(2000)
Divided Arsenal
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Kryder, D.T.1
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94
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0346168204
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15 Mar
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Los Angeles Times, 15 Mar. 1945, 2;
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(1945)
Los Angeles Times
, pp. 2
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101
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0346168204
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14 June
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Los Angeles Times, 14 June 1945, 2;
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(1945)
Los Angeles Times
, pp. 2
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102
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51249110612
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ibid., 18 June 1945, 2. Sponsored by Assemblyman Sam L. Collins, Warren's bill, A.B. 1399, proposed the establishment of a Commission on Political and Economic Equality for the purpose of research and education in this field.
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ibid., 18 June 1945, 2. Sponsored by Assemblyman Sam L. Collins, Warren's bill, A.B. 1399, proposed the establishment of a "Commission on Political and Economic Equality" for the "purpose of research and education in this field."
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103
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51249112561
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See Beach Vastly to Herbert Mitgang, 26 Nov. 1946, F3640:3657, Earl Warren Papers, California State Archives (hereafter EW-CSA). The commission would investigate the enforcement of existing statutes against discrimination and determine whether new legislation was necessary.
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See Beach Vastly to Herbert Mitgang, 26 Nov. 1946, F3640:3657, Earl Warren Papers, California State Archives (hereafter EW-CSA). The commission would investigate the enforcement of existing statutes against discrimination and determine whether new legislation was necessary.
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104
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51249104696
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See Los Angeles Sentinel, 11 Jan. 1945, 1.
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See Los Angeles Sentinel, 11 Jan. 1945, 1.
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105
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0346168204
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13 Dec
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Los Angeles Times, 13 Dec. 1945, 1;
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(1945)
Los Angeles Times
, pp. 1
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108
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51249087338
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Beach Vasey to Earl Warren 14 Jan. 1946, F3640:8401, EW-CSA.
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Beach Vasey to Earl Warren 14 Jan. 1946, F3640:8401, EW-CSA.
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109
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51249093074
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Beach Vasey to Earl Warren, F3640: 6100, 28 Feb. 1945, EW-CSA.
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Beach Vasey to Earl Warren, F3640: 6100, 28 Feb. 1945, EW-CSA.
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110
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51249091680
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William Nickersonjr., to Earl Warren, 7 Sept. 1945, F3640: 8452, EW-CSA. Albert Johnson, called to make a similar point to Warren about the significance of FEP to the black electorate.
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William Nickersonjr., to Earl Warren, 7 Sept. 1945, F3640: 8452, EW-CSA. Albert Johnson, called to make a similar point to Warren about the significance of FEP to the black electorate.
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111
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51249123781
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See Beach Vasey to Earl. Warren, 17 Aug. 1945, F3640: 3656, EW-CSA.
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See Beach Vasey to Earl. Warren, 17 Aug. 1945, F3640: 3656, EW-CSA.
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112
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51249112241
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Beach Vasey to Thomas E. Dewey, 15 Mar. 1945, F3540: 3656, EW-CSA; Beach Vasey to Earl Warren, 24 Mar. 1945, ibid;
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Beach Vasey to Thomas E. Dewey, 15 Mar. 1945, F3540: 3656, EW-CSA; Beach Vasey to Earl Warren, 24 Mar. 1945, ibid;
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113
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51249092402
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J. Welsh to Beach Vasey, 23 Mar, 1945, ibid.
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J. Welsh to Beach Vasey, 23 Mar, 1945, ibid.
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115
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51249117153
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Beach Vasey to Earl Warren, 18 Dec. 1945, F3640: 8452, EW-CSA.
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Beach Vasey to Earl Warren, 18 Dec. 1945, F3640: 8452, EW-CSA.
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116
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51249123783
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Beach Vasey to Earl Warren, 14 Jan. 1946, F3640: 8452, EW-CSA.
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Beach Vasey to Earl Warren, 14 Jan. 1946, F3640: 8452, EW-CSA.
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117
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51249093284
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Los Angeles Times, 16 Feb, 1946, 2. Warren's bill in 1946 was A.B. 97.
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Los Angeles Times, 16 Feb, 1946, 2. Warren's bill in 1946 was A.B. 97.
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118
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51249125104
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17 Jan
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Las Angeles Times, 17 Jan. 1946, 2;
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(1946)
Las Angeles Times
, pp. 2
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119
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51249122653
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Big Business Opposed, GOP Knifed State FEPC Measure, California Eagle, 24 Jan. 1946. See Chen, The Party of Lincoln and the Politics of State Fair Employment Practices Legislation in the North, 1736, The Hawkins bill was numbered A.B. 11, and the Evans bill was numbered A.B. 31.
-
"Big Business Opposed, GOP Knifed State FEPC Measure," California Eagle, 24 Jan. 1946. See Chen, "The Party of Lincoln and the Politics of State Fair Employment Practices Legislation in the North," 1736, The Hawkins bill was numbered A.B. 11, and the Evans bill was numbered A.B. 31.
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120
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51249093475
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Group Maps Plan for FEPC Initiative Campaign
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11 Nov
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"Group Maps Plan for FEPC Initiative Campaign," California Eagle, 11 Nov. 1945.
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(1945)
California Eagle
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121
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51249083948
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The Truth about the FEPC Bill
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21 Feb
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"The Truth about the FEPC Bill," California Eagle, 21 Feb. 1946.
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(1946)
California Eagle
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123
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51249111559
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11 Oct
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California Eagle, 11 Oct. 1947, 7.
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(1947)
California Eagle
, pp. 7
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125
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51249111560
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Beach Vasey to Earl Warren, 10 Oct. 1946, F3640: 8854, EW-CSA.
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Beach Vasey to Earl Warren, 10 Oct. 1946, F3640: 8854, EW-CSA.
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126
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51249086697
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Verne Scoggins to F.A. Ferguson, 15 Oct. 1946, F3640:8854, EW-CSA.
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Verne Scoggins to F.A. Ferguson, 15 Oct. 1946, F3640:8854, EW-CSA.
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127
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51249113244
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Earl Warren to Felix A. Manley, 13 Dec. 1946, F3640: 8854, EW-CSA.
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Earl Warren to Felix A. Manley, 13 Dec. 1946, F3640: 8854, EW-CSA.
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130
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51249105789
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23 May, EW-CSA
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Roger D. Lapham to Earl Warren, 23 May 1945, F3640: 7769, EW-CSA.
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(1945)
Lapham to Earl Warren
, vol.F3640
, pp. 7769
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Roger, D.1
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132
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51249090340
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Minutes, 6 Sept. 1946, 5, Folder: 1946-1947, Box 2242, records of the California Chamber of Commerce, California State Library.
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Minutes, 6 Sept. 1946, 5, Folder: 1946-1947, Box 2242, records of the California Chamber of Commerce, California State Library.
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133
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51249125104
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11 Oct
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Las Angeles Times, 11 Oct. 1946, 2.
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(1946)
Las Angeles Times
, pp. 2
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135
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51249088834
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Women of the Pacific, Employers! FEPC IS On Your Doorstep! n.d. [circa 19461, F3540: 8854, EW-CSA.
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Women of the Pacific, "Employers! FEPC IS On Your Doorstep!" n.d. [circa 19461, F3540: 8854, EW-CSA.
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136
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51249118528
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J.M. Whitley to Earl Warren, 8 Jan. 1947, F3640: 3657, EW-CSA. On the use of constituent letters as a source of information on public opinion, see Taeku Lee, Mobilizing Public Opinion (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002).
-
J.M. Whitley to Earl Warren, 8 Jan. 1947, F3640: 3657, EW-CSA. On the use of constituent letters as a source of information on public opinion, see Taeku Lee, Mobilizing Public Opinion (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002).
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140
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0007636001
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16 Feb
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Los Angeles Times, 16 Feb. 1946, 2.
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(1946)
Los Angeles Times
, pp. 2
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-
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143
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51249091695
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In his keynote address to the GOP national convention in 1944, Warren decried New Dealers' attempts to ensnare workers in regulation that would reduce their opportunity to work where they pleased, and prevent business owners from running their firms as they saw fit (New York Times, 25 and 27 June 1944, 12; Los Angeles Times, 27 and 28 June 1944, 2).
-
In his keynote address to the GOP national convention in 1944, Warren decried New Dealers' attempts to ensnare workers in regulation that would reduce their opportunity to work where they pleased, and prevent business owners from running their firms as they saw fit (New York Times, 25 and 27 June 1944, 12; Los Angeles Times, 27 and 28 June 1944, 2).
-
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144
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51249090545
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Records for two counties, Kern and San Mateo, are no longer available
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Records for two counties, Kern and San Mateo, are no longer available.
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145
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51249083048
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Due to a coding error in some precincts we cannot use the Senate race as a benchmark for the entire state, although it produces nearly identical results to the Lieutenant Governor's race in the subset of correctly coded precincts
-
Due to a coding error in some precincts we cannot use the Senate race as a benchmark for the entire state, although it produces nearly identical results to the Lieutenant Governor's race in the subset of correctly coded precincts.
-
-
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146
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27744558861
-
Black Candidates and Black Voters: Assessing the Impact of Candidate Race on Uncounted Vote Rates
-
For a similar use of bounds, see
-
For a similar use of bounds, see Jasjeet Singh Sekhon and Michael C. Herron, "Black Candidates and Black Voters: Assessing the Impact of Candidate Race on Uncounted Vote Rates," Journal of Politics 67 (2005): 154-177.
-
(2005)
Journal of Politics
, vol.67
, pp. 154-177
-
-
Singh Sekhon, J.1
Herron, M.C.2
-
147
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84876729044
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Ecological Regression and the Behavior of Individuals
-
Leo Goodman, "Ecological Regression and the Behavior of Individuals," American Sociological Review 18 (1953): 663-664.
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(1953)
American Sociological Review
, vol.18
, pp. 663-664
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-
Goodman, L.1
-
149
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0037731840
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This regression is based on 14,909 precincts, and the r-squared statistic is 30. Table 2 presents the associated confidence intervals, which are constructed using the simulation-based procedure outlined in Michael Tomz and Robert Van Houweling, How Does Voting Equipment Affect the Racial Gap in Voided Ballots, American Journal of Political Science 47 2003, 46-60
-
This regression is based on 14,909 precincts, and the r-squared statistic is 30. Table 2 presents the associated confidence intervals, which are constructed using the simulation-based procedure outlined in Michael Tomz and Robert Van Houweling, "How Does Voting Equipment Affect the Racial Gap in Voided Ballots?", American Journal of Political Science 47 (2003): 46-60.
-
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-
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151
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51249105368
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i does not bias the point estimates, though it does affect their variance, an issue we address by computing heteroskedastic-consistent standard errors in reur regression models.
-
i does not bias the point estimates, though it does affect their variance, an issue we address by computing heteroskedastic-consistent standard errors in reur regression models.
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152
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51249083947
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Achen and Shively, Cross-Level Inference.
-
Achen and Shively, Cross-Level Inference.
-
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153
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51249101541
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2 = 0, thereby fixing Democratic support for Proposition 11 at a constant level while letting Republican support depend on the partisan composition or precincts.
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2 = 0, thereby fixing Democratic support for Proposition 11 at a constant level while letting Republican support depend on the partisan composition or precincts.
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-
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154
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51249100031
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This regression is based on 14,909 precincts, and the r-squared statistic is 31
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This regression is based on 14,909 precincts, and the r-squared statistic is 31.
-
-
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155
-
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51249089495
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Tomz and Van. Houweling, How Does Voting Equipment Affect the Racial Gap in Voided Ballots?.
-
Tomz and Van. Houweling, "How Does Voting Equipment Affect the Racial Gap in Voided Ballots?".
-
-
-
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158
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51249114533
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di, the partisan composition of the precincts, in a way analogous to the quadratic model. When we let the rate of one group or the other vary with the composition of precincts, the estimates produced by EI were nearly identical to those produced when we fixed the rates of both groups across precincts.
-
di, the partisan composition of the precincts, in a way analogous to the quadratic model. When we let the rate of one group or the other vary with the composition of precincts, the estimates produced by EI were nearly identical to those produced when we fixed the rates of both groups across precincts.
-
-
-
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159
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51249107790
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Percent urban and percent nonwhite are drawn from the 1940 census. Value-added manufacturing data are from 1947.
-
Percent urban and percent nonwhite are drawn from the 1940 census. Value-added manufacturing data are from 1947.
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-
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160
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51249123559
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Tomz and Van Houweling, How Does Verting Equipment Affect the Racial Gap in Voided Ballots?.
-
Tomz and Van Houweling, "How Does Verting Equipment Affect the Racial Gap in Voided Ballots?".
-
-
-
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161
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51249088405
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We adopt this method because it is straightforward and produces the most conservative estimates of the difference between the partisan groups of the three methods we have employed. Results using King's EI are very similar to those we report
-
We adopt this method because it is straightforward and produces the most conservative estimates of the difference between the partisan groups of the three methods we have employed. Results using King's EI are very similar to those we report.
-
-
-
-
162
-
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51249118529
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We also divided the counties based on their rate of population growth between 1940 and 1950 and detected no significant difference in the behavior of either partisan group defending on the rate of growth in the counties they inhabited
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We also divided the counties based on their rate of population growth between 1940 and 1950 and detected no significant difference in the behavior of either partisan group defending on the rate of growth in the counties they inhabited.
-
-
-
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164
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51249089711
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Although there is no evidence one way or the other, we do not think that most voters interpreted his silence as outright opposition to Proposition 11. Warren could have easily professed to support the underlying principle of the initiative but oppose it because it contained certain objectionable provisions. That he remained resolutely silent would have simply deepened their puzzlement
-
Although there is no evidence one way or the other, we do not think that most voters interpreted his silence as outright opposition to Proposition 11. Warren could have easily professed to support the underlying principle of the initiative but oppose it because it contained certain objectionable provisions. That he remained resolutely silent would have simply deepened their puzzlement.
-
-
-
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165
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51249092177
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If the racial conservatism of Republicans voters does not appear elite-led, neither does the racial liberalism of Democratic elites. Our findings suggest that any Democratic efforts to make inroads among Republicans by adopting a racially conservative position on FEP would, have been fraught with substantial electoral danger. It could have cost them the loyalty of racial liberals and thereby risked splitting their heterogeneous electoral base. In the case of Republicans and Democrats, then, it appears plausible that the masses were constraining partisan, elites rather than being led by them. This finding is in tension with contemporary research on parties and party competition. Downsian models of party competition highlight elite choice, while historical-institutionalist modes of explanation emphasize the contingency of political outcomes and processes. It may be that the social bases of party competition have gone underappreciated, and under-theorized, in the process. More comp
-
If the racial conservatism of Republicans voters does not appear elite-led, neither does the racial liberalism of Democratic elites. Our findings suggest that any Democratic efforts to make inroads among Republicans by adopting a racially conservative position on FEP would, have been fraught with substantial electoral danger. It could have cost them the loyalty of racial liberals and thereby risked splitting their heterogeneous electoral base. In the case of Republicans and Democrats, then, it appears plausible that the masses were constraining partisan, elites rather than being led by them. This finding is in tension with contemporary research on parties and party competition. Downsian models of party competition highlight elite choice, while historical-institutionalist modes of explanation emphasize the contingency of political outcomes and processes. It may be that the social bases of party competition have gone underappreciated, and under-theorized, in the process. More compelling spatial models of party competition incorporate the agency of activists.
-
-
-
-
166
-
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51249095869
-
-
See John H, Aldrich, Why Parties? (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995). However, the relationship between activists and the social bases of parties is unclear. For a critique of historical-institutionalist scholarship along these lines, see Paul Frymer and Robert W Mickey, Missed Opportunities in 'Missed Opportunities' Research: Reassessing Structure and Contingency in the New Deal Era, paper presented at the 2007 APSA Annual Meetings, Chicago.
-
See John H, Aldrich, Why Parties? (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995). However, the relationship between activists and the social bases of parties is unclear. For a critique of historical-institutionalist scholarship along these lines, see Paul Frymer and Robert W Mickey, "Missed Opportunities in 'Missed Opportunities' Research: Reassessing Structure and Contingency in the New Deal Era," paper presented at the 2007 APSA Annual Meetings, Chicago.
-
-
-
-
167
-
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51249124013
-
-
Langdon Post, California Democrats in the Earl Warren Era, an oral history conducted in 1971-1972 by Amelia R. Fry for the Regional Oral History Office, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley, California, 1976;
-
Langdon Post, California Democrats in the Earl Warren Era, an oral history conducted in 1971-1972 by Amelia R. Fry for the Regional Oral History Office, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley, California, 1976;
-
-
-
-
168
-
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51249112240
-
-
Tarea Hall Pittman, NAACP Official and Civil Rigfits Worker, an oral history conducted in 1971-1972, Regional Oral History Office, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley, 1974;
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Tarea Hall Pittman, NAACP Official and Civil Rigfits Worker, an oral history conducted in 1971-1972, Regional Oral History Office, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley, 1974;
-
-
-
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169
-
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51249087543
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Richard Rodda, Bee Perspectives on the Warren Era, an oral history conduced in 1969-1972 by Amelia R. Fry and June C. Hogan for the Regional Oral. History Office, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley, 1976.
-
Richard Rodda, Bee Perspectives on the Warren Era, an oral history conduced in 1969-1972 by Amelia R. Fry and June C. Hogan for the Regional Oral. History Office, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley, 1976.
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-
-
-
170
-
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0012372224
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On the politics of fair housing legislation, see
-
On the politics of fair housing legislation, see Duane Lockard, Toward Equal Opportunity;
-
Toward Equal Opportunity
-
-
Lockard, D.1
-
172
-
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33646262883
-
The Political Economy of State Fair-Housing Laws Prior to 1968
-
William J. Collins, "The Political Economy of State Fair-Housing Laws Prior to 1968," Social Science History 30 (2006): 15-49;
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(2006)
Social Science History
, vol.30
, pp. 15-49
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Collins, W.J.1
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173
-
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51249119221
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Anthony S. Chen and Robin Phinney, Did the Civil Rights Movement Have a Direct Impact on Public Policy? Evidence from the Passage of State Fair Housing Laws, Working Paper 2004-005, Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, University of Michigan.
-
Anthony S. Chen and Robin Phinney, "Did the Civil Rights Movement Have a Direct Impact on Public Policy? Evidence from the Passage of State Fair Housing Laws," Working Paper 2004-005, Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, University of Michigan.
-
-
-
-
174
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84971120779
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Republican support for keeping the law on the books ranged from 8 percent (high school graduates) to 33 percent (more than 2 years of college), while for Democrats, support for the law ranged from 29 percent (less than high school) to 64 percent (more than 2 years of college). Raymond E. Wolfinger and Fred I. Greenstein, The Repeal of Fair Housing in California: An Analysis of Referendum Voting, American Political Science Review 62 (1968), 760, Table 8.
-
Republican support for keeping the law on the books ranged from 8 percent (high school graduates) to 33 percent (more than 2 years of college), while for Democrats, support for the law ranged from 29 percent (less than high school) to 64 percent (more than 2 years of college). Raymond E. Wolfinger and Fred I. Greenstein, "The Repeal of Fair Housing in California: An Analysis of Referendum Voting," American Political Science Review 62 (1968), 760, Table 8.
-
-
-
-
175
-
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51249122054
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Upholding the 'Right' to Discriminate: The California Real Estate Association and the Fight against Fair Housing Law
-
For an important new look at the politics of fair housing in California, see, paper presented at the, St. Louis, MO, 30 May
-
For an important new look at the politics of fair housing in California, see Andrea Gill, "Upholding the 'Right' to Discriminate: The California Real Estate Association and the Fight against Fair Housing Law," paper presented at the Policy History Conference, St. Louis, MO, 30 May 2008.
-
(2008)
Policy History Conference
-
-
Gill, A.1
-
176
-
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51249087760
-
-
A pre-election poll in Detroit showed that 82 percent of Republicans planned to vote for the ordinance, compared to 64 percent of Democrats. Harlan Hahn, Northern Referenda on Fair Housing: The Response of White Voters, Western. Political Quarterly (1968) :489.
-
A pre-election poll in Detroit showed that 82 percent of Republicans planned to vote for the ordinance, compared to 64 percent of Democrats. Harlan Hahn, "Northern Referenda on Fair Housing: The Response of White Voters," Western. Political Quarterly (1968) :489.
-
-
-
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177
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51249111107
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-
For instance, based on a question about state FEP legislation administered in a 1946 Gallup Poll, it would seem that Connecticut, New Jersey, New York, and Rhode Island all exhibit the same high level of public support for state FEP legislation. California's tevel of public support is noticeably lower, though it is comparable to the level of support in states such as Michigan, Ohio, and Illinois. Authors' calculations from Gallup Organization, Gallup Poll, No. 349 Storrs, CT: Roper Center, 1945, In the politics of state FEP legislation, California belongs to a group of late-adopting states that included Illinois and Ohio. All three states passed such legislation belatedly because the GOP retained control over veto points through the late-1950s and early-1960s. This suggests that California is not exceptional, but rather typical, of racially conservative states
-
For instance, based on a question about state FEP legislation administered in a 1946 Gallup Poll, it would seem that Connecticut, New Jersey, New York, and Rhode Island all exhibit the same high level of public support for state FEP legislation. California's tevel of public support is noticeably lower, though it is comparable to the level of support in states such as Michigan, Ohio, and Illinois. Authors' calculations from Gallup Organization, Gallup Poll, No. 349 (Storrs, CT: Roper Center, 1945). In the politics of state FEP legislation, California belongs to a group of late-adopting states that included Illinois and Ohio. All three states passed such legislation belatedly because the GOP retained control over veto points through the late-1950s and early-1960s. This suggests that California is not exceptional, but rather typical, of racially conservative states.
-
-
-
-
178
-
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33845306251
-
American Public Opinion in the 1930s and 1940s: The Analysis of Quota-Controlled Sample Survey Data
-
Adam J. Berinsky, "American Public Opinion in the 1930s and 1940s: The Analysis of Quota-Controlled Sample Survey Data," Public Opinion Quarterly (2006): 499-529.
-
(2006)
Public Opinion Quarterly
, pp. 499-529
-
-
Berinsky, A.J.1
|