- American Journal of Political Science

Authored by onlinelibrary.wiley.com and submitted by smurfyjenkins
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Protests can engender significant institutional change. Can protests also continue to shape a nation's contemporary politics outside of more formalized channels? I argue that social movements can not only beget institutional change, but also long‐run, attitudinal change. Using the case of the U.S. civil rights movement, I develop a theory in which protests can shift attitudes and these attitudes can persist. Data from over 150,000 survey respondents provide evidence consistent with the theory. Whites from counties that experienced historical civil rights protests are more likely to identify as Democrats and support affirmative action, and less likely to harbor racial resentment against blacks. These individual‐level results are politically meaningful—counties that experienced civil rights protests are associated with greater Democratic Party vote shares even today. This study highlights how social movements can have persistent impacts on a nation's politics.

QuadrumanousCuddler on September 1st, 2018 at 15:45 UTC »

All I can see is the abstract, but I'd really be interested to see how they think they can prove causation from "historical civil rights protests" while ignoring correlated demographic factors such as education, generational poverty, and race itself.

suugakusha on September 1st, 2018 at 15:18 UTC »

The correlation makes sense, but the causation seems backwards.

Wouldn't it make more sense that areas that had civil rights protests were having those protests because they were less likely to harbor racial resentment? Not the other way around?

MisterMetal on September 1st, 2018 at 13:12 UTC »

Seems like a major stretch to automatically link it to protest activity, when the areas with the higher protest activity in the civil rights era were areas with a higher black population. The higher black population would lead to more interaction between the white and the black residents, which I would put a large sum of money on being a bigger factor for attitudinal changes than protests.