Journal
POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s11109-022-09845-8
Keywords
Group identity; Race; Public health; Addiction; Healthcare; Public policy
Categories
Funding
- Time-sharing Experiments for the Social Sciences (TESS)
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This study demonstrates through experiments that the depiction of substance users' racial identity in news media has an impact on public support for policies addressing the opioid crisis. The study shows that people tend to display biases in favor of their own racial identity group, which manifest in their support for treatment-based policies and punitive policies. These biases may be influenced by the initial drug used by substance users and the perceived level of blame. However, no similar biases were found based on gender and residential context identities.
How do media portrayals of potential policy beneficiaries' identities sway public support for these policies in a public health setting? Using a pre-registered vignette experiment, we show that the racial identity of substance users depicted in news media shapes public opinion on policies to address the opioid crisis. People display biases in favor of their own racial identity group that manifest in their support for both treatment-based policies and punitive policies. We show that these biases may be moderated by the type of initial drug used by a substance user and associated levels of perceived blame. Extending theories of group politics, we also assess favoritism based on gender and residential context identities, but find no such biases. These results highlight the continued centrality of race in the formation of policy preferences.
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