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Dialogue: Linked Fate and the Politics of Groups and Identities

Racial linked fate and gender in U.S. politics

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Pages 654-662 | Received 08 Feb 2019, Accepted 28 Jun 2019, Published online: 10 Jul 2019
 

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes

1 His more recent work corrects for this oversight. See for instance, Michael Dawson (Citation2001Citation2016, Citation2019).

2 Among men, the patterns of favorability toward Clinton by race are similar, with 75% of Black men with high linked fate giving her favorable rating versus 38% of white men with high linked fate.

3 A recent study of OECD countries found that 71% of women with one child, and 62% of women with two children are employed, while performing four times as much housework, and twice as much childcare, as their male partners (Gornick and Meyers Citation2008).

4 The 2016 US census reports, “The real median income of non- Hispanic White ($65,041), Black ($39,490), and Hispanic-origin ($47,675) households” (Semega, Fontenot, and Kollar Citation2017).

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