Political ideology, racism, and American identity: an examination of white Americans’ support for the police use of excessive force

<p>Under what conditions do white Americans support police violence? And what are the terms by which they do so? </p> <p>This thesis explores how those who evince the strongest support for police, namely white Americans, “experience” incidents of excessive force, and examines the...

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Auteur principal: Milani, J
Autres auteurs: Bradford, B
Format: Thèse
Langue:English
Publié: 2019
Sujets:
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author Milani, J
author2 Bradford, B
author_facet Bradford, B
Milani, J
author_sort Milani, J
collection OXFORD
description <p>Under what conditions do white Americans support police violence? And what are the terms by which they do so? </p> <p>This thesis explores how those who evince the strongest support for police, namely white Americans, “experience” incidents of excessive force, and examines the ideological mechanisms by which they make appraisals about policing. Across two online surveys of white American adults, varying the racial identity (white/black) of a police officer and suspect in a fictional scenario of violence showed no effect on respondents’ assessments of the encounter. Instead, ideological commitments to individualism, as measured in in just-world (Lerner 1980) and libertarian-authoritarian (Heath et al. 1994) attitudes, were associated with strikingly high levels of support for excessive force. </p> <p>I situate these empirical findings within a broader theoretical argument about white American identity, and the ideologies, mythologies, and pathologies that sustain it, namely the American Dream emphasis on desert, merit, and self-enterprise. I argue that excessive force is made legible through a frame of personal responsibility, with national and political identities influencing how white Americans, specifically, perceive and reconcile inequality. I suggest this way of “seeing” may explain why so many white Americans, in particular, continue to support the police. </p> <p>This research moves beyond identifying socio-demographic correlates for the approval of police violence, and uses rich theoretical examination and original survey data to investigate the role that racism and political ideology play in explaining white Americans’ beliefs about the appropriateness of excessive force. </p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:248c24cc-08cf-406a-a897-a8c83cda4e132024-12-01T18:45:58ZPolitical ideology, racism, and American identity: an examination of white Americans’ support for the police use of excessive forceThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:248c24cc-08cf-406a-a897-a8c83cda4e13Social PsychologyAmerican PoliticsCriminologyEnglishHyrax Deposit2019Milani, JBradford, BLoader, I<p>Under what conditions do white Americans support police violence? And what are the terms by which they do so? </p> <p>This thesis explores how those who evince the strongest support for police, namely white Americans, “experience” incidents of excessive force, and examines the ideological mechanisms by which they make appraisals about policing. Across two online surveys of white American adults, varying the racial identity (white/black) of a police officer and suspect in a fictional scenario of violence showed no effect on respondents’ assessments of the encounter. Instead, ideological commitments to individualism, as measured in in just-world (Lerner 1980) and libertarian-authoritarian (Heath et al. 1994) attitudes, were associated with strikingly high levels of support for excessive force. </p> <p>I situate these empirical findings within a broader theoretical argument about white American identity, and the ideologies, mythologies, and pathologies that sustain it, namely the American Dream emphasis on desert, merit, and self-enterprise. I argue that excessive force is made legible through a frame of personal responsibility, with national and political identities influencing how white Americans, specifically, perceive and reconcile inequality. I suggest this way of “seeing” may explain why so many white Americans, in particular, continue to support the police. </p> <p>This research moves beyond identifying socio-demographic correlates for the approval of police violence, and uses rich theoretical examination and original survey data to investigate the role that racism and political ideology play in explaining white Americans’ beliefs about the appropriateness of excessive force. </p>
spellingShingle Social Psychology
American Politics
Criminology
Milani, J
Political ideology, racism, and American identity: an examination of white Americans’ support for the police use of excessive force
title Political ideology, racism, and American identity: an examination of white Americans’ support for the police use of excessive force
title_full Political ideology, racism, and American identity: an examination of white Americans’ support for the police use of excessive force
title_fullStr Political ideology, racism, and American identity: an examination of white Americans’ support for the police use of excessive force
title_full_unstemmed Political ideology, racism, and American identity: an examination of white Americans’ support for the police use of excessive force
title_short Political ideology, racism, and American identity: an examination of white Americans’ support for the police use of excessive force
title_sort political ideology racism and american identity an examination of white americans support for the police use of excessive force
topic Social Psychology
American Politics
Criminology
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