4.4 Article

Racial Resentment and Whites' Gun Policy Preferences in Contemporary America

Journal

POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
Volume 38, Issue 2, Pages 255-275

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s11109-015-9326-4

Keywords

Racial resentment; Symbolic racism; Prejudice; Gun control; Public policy; Public opinion

Funding

  1. Political Science Department
  2. Office of Social Science Research (OSSR)
  3. Chancellor's Discovery Grant program at the University of Illinois at Chicago
  4. Institute for Research on Race and Public Policy at UIC

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Our study investigates how and why racial prejudice can fuel white opposition to gun restrictions. Drawing on research across disciplines, we suggest that the language of individual freedom used by the gun rights movement utilizes the same racially meaningful tropes as the rhetoric of the white resistance to black civil rights that developed after WWII and into the 1970s. This indicates that the gun rights narrative is color-coded and evocative of racial resentment. To determine whether racial prejudice depresses white support for gun control, we designed a priming experiment which exposed respondents to pictures of blacks and whites drawn from the IAT. Results show that exposure to the prime suppressed support for gun control compared to the control, conditional upon a respondent's level of racial resentment. Analyses of ANES data (2004-2013) reaffirm these findings. Racial resentment is a statistically significant and substantively important predictor of white opposition to gun control.

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