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"In whom do we trust?": The effect o...
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Duke University.
"In whom do we trust?": The effect of racial socialization on black Americans' perceptions of trust.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
"In whom do we trust?": The effect of racial socialization on black Americans' perceptions of trust.
作者:
Nunnally, Shayla C.
面頁冊數:
292 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 66-07, Section: A, page: 2706.
附註:
Supervisor: Paula D. McClain.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International66-07A.
標題:
Political Science, General.
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3181024
ISBN:
9780542214547
"In whom do we trust?": The effect of racial socialization on black Americans' perceptions of trust.
Nunnally, Shayla C.
"In whom do we trust?": The effect of racial socialization on black Americans' perceptions of trust.
- 292 p.
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 66-07, Section: A, page: 2706.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Duke University, 2005.
Much of the literature on black Americans' social trust and political trust finds that they are less trusting than other racial groups. Recent explanations of blacks' distrust focus on anecdotal evidence, suggesting that this group's historical experiences with racial discrimination affect distrust. Previous empirical investigations of blacks' distrust focused on the effect of political socialization on black political attitudes. These studies mostly were confined to an earlier era of black political behavior research. This dissertation follows this strain of research by analyzing the effect of black Americans' racial socialization and racialized political socialization experiences on their social trust and political trust by explaining the way that race operates in their trust perception in social and political contexts. The dissertation theory shows how race influences social trust and political trust. The model of this theory shows how race is internalized in black Americans' psychological orientations and how black Americans' psychological orientations about race influence the way that they externalize race in black social and political behavior. Data are analyzed from the 2000 Social Capital Benchmark Survey and an original survey, the 2004 Black American Socialization and Trust Survey. The research finds that different racial socialization messages affect black Americans' trust levels, although in a tenuous relationship. Higher racial trust increases black Americans' social trust and political trust. Evidence from unobtrusive measures in survey experiments suggests that black Americans distinguish levels of trust depending on the race of the person evaluated.
ISBN: 9780542214547Subjects--Topical Terms:
212408
Political Science, General.
"In whom do we trust?": The effect of racial socialization on black Americans' perceptions of trust.
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Much of the literature on black Americans' social trust and political trust finds that they are less trusting than other racial groups. Recent explanations of blacks' distrust focus on anecdotal evidence, suggesting that this group's historical experiences with racial discrimination affect distrust. Previous empirical investigations of blacks' distrust focused on the effect of political socialization on black political attitudes. These studies mostly were confined to an earlier era of black political behavior research. This dissertation follows this strain of research by analyzing the effect of black Americans' racial socialization and racialized political socialization experiences on their social trust and political trust by explaining the way that race operates in their trust perception in social and political contexts. The dissertation theory shows how race influences social trust and political trust. The model of this theory shows how race is internalized in black Americans' psychological orientations and how black Americans' psychological orientations about race influence the way that they externalize race in black social and political behavior. Data are analyzed from the 2000 Social Capital Benchmark Survey and an original survey, the 2004 Black American Socialization and Trust Survey. The research finds that different racial socialization messages affect black Americans' trust levels, although in a tenuous relationship. Higher racial trust increases black Americans' social trust and political trust. Evidence from unobtrusive measures in survey experiments suggests that black Americans distinguish levels of trust depending on the race of the person evaluated.
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