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Campaigning in a racially diversifying America : when and how cross-racial electoral mobilization works

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Campaigning in a racially diversifying America : when and how cross-racial electoral mobilization works

Call No. (NDL)
AU-251-D11
Bibliographic ID of National Diet Library
030046406
Material type
図書
Author
Loren Collingwood.
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Publication date
[2020]
Material Format
Paper
Capacity, size, etc.
xviii, 218 pages ; 25cm
NDC
-
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Paper

Material Type
図書
ISBN
0190073357 hardcover
9780190073350 hardcover
Author/Editor
Loren Collingwood.
Author Heading
Publication Date
[2020]
Publication Date (W3CDTF)
2020
Extent
xviii, 218 pages
Size
25cm
Place of Publication (Country Code)
US
Text Language Code
eng
Content Type
txt : text
Media Type
n : unmediated
Carrier Type
nc : volume
Target Audience
一般
Note (Content)
As the voting public continues to diversify across the United States, political candidates, and particularly white candidates, increasingly recognize the importance of making appeals to voters who do not look like themselves. As history has shown, this has been accomplished with varying degrees of success. During the 2016 election, for example, both Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders campaigned vociferously among Latino voters in Nevada's early primary, where nineteen percent of the Democratic caucus consisted of Latinos. Clinton released a campaign message to these voters stating that she was just like their abuela (or grandmother). The message, widely panned, came across as insincere, and Clinton, who otherwise performed well among Latinos nationally, lost by a wide margin to Sanders. On the other hand, in 2013, Bill de Blasio, campaigning for mayor of New York City, appeared with his black son in a commercial aimed against stop and frisk policies. His appeal came across as authentic, and he received a high level of support among black voters. 0In Campaigning in a Racially Diversifying America, Loren Collingwood develops a theory of Cross-Racial Electoral Mobilization (CRM) to explain why, when, and how candidates of one race or ethnicity act to mobilize voters of another race or ethnicity. Specifically, Collingwood examines how and when white candidates mobilize Latino voters, and why some candidates are more succesful than others. He argues that candidates strategize by weighing the potential costs and benefits of conducting CRM based on the size of the minority electorate (the benefit) and the overall level of white racial hostility (the cost). Extensive cross-racial mobilization is most likely to occur when elections are competitive, institutional barriers to the vote are low, candidates have previously developed a welcoming racial reputation with target voters, whites' attitudes are racially liberal, and the Latino electorate is large and growing.
Note (Bibliography)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Holding library
国立国会図書館
Call No.
AU-251-D11
Data Provider (Database)
国立国会図書館 : 国立国会図書館蔵書
Bibliographic ID (NDL)
030046406
Cataloging Rule
RDA
Bibliographic Record Category (NDL)
211