Red States and Black Lives: Applying the Racial Threat Hypothesis to the Black Lives Matter Movement

Date

2018-11-05

ORCID

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Routledge

item.page.doi

Abstract

Despite increased media attention, the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement has received little scholarly attention. News coverage of BLM is often divisive, which suggests important differences may exist in how the public views BLM. Within the context of the racial threat perspective, the present study uses a nationally representative sample of 2,114 individuals from 33 states and the District of Columbia to identify state- and individual-level predictors of BLM opposition. Results reveal that older, Republican, and conservative men are more likely to oppose BLM, while Blacks and individuals who perceive their local police to exhibit racial biases against Blacks are less likely to oppose BLM. State-level racial threat variables are largely nonsignificant, but states with more fatal police shootings are less likely to oppose BLM, while states where the Republican candidate won a greater percentage of the vote in the 2012 presidential election are more likely to oppose BLM.

Description

Full text access from Treasures at UT Dallas is restricted to current UTD affiliates.

Keywords

Social conflict, Black lives matter movement, Law enforcement, Police shootings, Racism

item.page.sponsorship

Rights

CC BY 2.0 (Attribution), ©2018 Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences

Citation

Collections