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Selling Out?: The Politics of Navigating Conflicts between Racial Group Interest and Self-interest

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  • WHITE, ISMAIL K.
  • LAIRD, CHRYL N.
  • ALLEN, TROY D.

Abstract

Departing from accounts of minority group politics that focus on the role of group identity in advancing group members’ common interests, we investigate political decisions involving tradeoffs between group interests and simple self-interest. Using the case of black Americans, we investigate crystallized group norms about politics, internalized beliefs about group solidarity, and mechanisms for enforcing both through social pressure. Through a series of novel behavioral experiments that offer black subjects individual incentives to defect from the position most favored by black Americans as a group, we test the effects of social pressure to conform. We find that racialized social pressure and internalized beliefs in group solidarity are constraining and depress self-interested behavior. Our results speak to a common conflict—choosing between maximizing group interests and self-interest—and yet also offer specific insight into how blacks remain so homogeneous in partisan politics despite their growing ideological and economic variation.

Suggested Citation

  • White, Ismail K. & Laird, Chryl N. & Allen, Troy D., 2014. "Selling Out?: The Politics of Navigating Conflicts between Racial Group Interest and Self-interest," American Political Science Review, Cambridge University Press, vol. 108(4), pages 783-800, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:apsrev:v:108:y:2014:i:04:p:783-800_00
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    Cited by:

    1. Alexandra Filindra & Melanie Kolbe, 2022. "Latinx identification with whiteness: What drives it, and what effects does it have on political preferences?," Social Science Quarterly, Southwestern Social Science Association, vol. 103(6), pages 1424-1439, November.
    2. Mitoko, Jeremiah, 2021. "Concentration of power and Populism's Rise in America: evidence from recent US elections," MPRA Paper 108757, University Library of Munich, Germany.
    3. Jennifer D. Wu & Gregory A. Huber, 2021. "Partisan Differences in Social Distancing May Originate in Norms and Beliefs: Results from Novel Data," Social Science Quarterly, Southwestern Social Science Association, vol. 102(5), pages 2251-2265, September.
    4. Damon C. Roberts & Stephen M. Utych, 2021. "Polarized social distancing: Residents of Republican‐majority counties spend more time away from home during the COVID‐19 crisis," Social Science Quarterly, Southwestern Social Science Association, vol. 102(6), pages 2516-2527, November.
    5. Shana Kushner Gadarian & Sara Wallace Goodman & Thomas B Pepinsky, 2021. "Partisanship, health behavior, and policy attitudes in the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 16(4), pages 1-13, April.

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