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How slavery continues to shape Southern politics
Facing South Blog ^ | September 23, 2013 | Sue Sturgis

Posted on 09/24/2013 8:03:38 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

The slave population, shown in the above map based on the 1860 census, was concentrated in counties where cotton plantations dominated the local economy. Whites in these areas today express more racial resentment and are more likely to vote Republican and oppose affirmative action than other Southerners, a new study finds.

Whites who live in areas of the South once dominated by the plantation economy and slavery are much more likely than other Southerners to express colder feelings toward African Americans, to oppose affirmative action, and to vote Republican.

Those are among the findings of a groundbreaking new study titled "The Political Legacy of American Slavery" by a team of political scientists from the University of Rochester in New York. It was based on a county-by-county analysis of census data and opinion polls of more than 39,000 Southern whites.

"Slavery does not explain all forms of current day racism," says Avidit Acharya, who conducted the study along with Matthew Blackwell and Maya Sen. "But the data clearly demonstrates that the legacy of the plantation economy and its reliance on the forced labor of African Americans continues to exacerbate racial bias in the Deep South."

To explain their results, the authors theorize that Southern whites -- faced with having their political and economic power undermined by emancipation -- had incentive to propagate racist violence, institutions and norms in parts of the region like the so-called "Black Belt" or "Cotton Belt" that had high numbers of freed slaves in the decades after 1865.

"We argue that these attitudes have, to some degree, been passed down locally from one generation to the next," they write.

The researchers looked at data from 93 percent of the 1,344 Southern counties in the Black Belt where plantations dominated the economy from the late 1700s into the early 1900s. They found that a 20 percent increase in the percentage of slaves in a county's pre-Civil War population is associated today with a 3 percent decrease in whites who identify as Democrats and a 2.4 percent decrease in the number of whites who support affirmative action.

What they call the "slavery effect" accounts for up to a 15 percentage point difference in party affiliation today. About 30 percent of whites in former slave plantation areas report being Democrats, compared to 40 to 45 percent of whites in counties where slaves made up less than 3 percent of the population.

The researchers considered whether there could be alternative explanations for their findings. For example, they looked at whether whites who live around larger black populations have more negative racial attitudes -- what's known as the "theory of racial threat." But they found that share of black population actually predicts warmer attitudes toward blacks among whites once slavery is accounted for.

They also considered whether what they found was related to slavery being more prevalent in rural areas, which tend to be more conservative than urban areas, or whether it had something to do with Civil War destruction, or with whites holding particular racial attitudes migrating to areas with others of like mind. But again, those hypotheses did not hold up to scrutiny.

The study also compared Southern counties with very few slaves in 1860 to non-Southern counties with no slaves in the same period. It found very little difference.

"Thus, in the absence of localized slavery, it appears that the South would have had a distribution of present-day political beliefs indistinguishable from comparable parts of the North," the authors write. "This provides evidence that the effect that we see comes primarily from the local presence of many slaves, rather than state laws permitting the ownership of slaves."

The researchers point to an emerging literature showing that the legacy of slavery can be observed today in other contexts internationally -- from lower levels of household consumption and childhood growth in areas of Peru and Bolivia where people were subject to forced labor, to higher poverty, reduced school enrollment and lower vaccination rates in parts of Colombia where gold was mined by slaves.

The authors will present their findings at the Politics of Race, Immigration, and Ethnicity Consortium at the University of California at Riverside on Sept. 27.

"In political circles, the South's political conservatism is often credited to 'Southern exceptionalism,'" says Blackwell. "But the data shows that such modern-day political differences primarily rise from the historical presence of many slaves."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; Politics; Society
KEYWORDS: blacks; blackvote; democrats; dixie; economy; racism
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To: JSDude1

I judge each man as they come to me.

But I am not blind to the racism of the black race.

One would have to be totally stupid not to see what is going on, the murder in big cities, the knock out game, the movies made by black actors, the CBC and many other activities blacks carryout.

Blacks call whites racist, but whites are not near as racist and certainly not as violently racist as blacks.


21 posted on 09/25/2013 4:43:56 AM PDT by Venturer ( cowardice posturing as tolerance =political correctness)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I grew up in the segregated south in the 60’s.

As kids, we didn’t know anything about race — we just all showed up at the little league fields on weekends, chose up sides and played. Black and white didn’t matter.

Nowadays, if you look at the elected officials and staff in city & county government, it is all about 80%+ black.

So according to these pointy-headed researchers, if slavery based racism continues to this day, then it’s the blacks in local govt discriminating against other blacks??!!

I don’t think they know what they are writing about. I believe they entered the project with a pre-conceived notion and conducted their research to bolster it accordingly.


22 posted on 09/25/2013 5:12:59 AM PDT by jaydee770
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Racism comes in all colors and nationalities. I was raised to make judgments on a person by person basis. As a Navy brat who lived overseas, I encountered a diverse group of kids (American school with diplomat children from all over the world) and there was no drama outside of usual kid behavior. The only way to combat racism or any hate is to educate yourself. Jesus Christ took it upon himself (just saying). My belief is that dependency on Government creates shackles. Imaged by people with both hands out, palms up a.k.a slavery.
23 posted on 09/25/2013 7:51:26 AM PDT by smilebig1 (Just one opinion)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Typical neoyankee agitprop

Southern whites vote like they do for several reasons for

More Christian believers

More socially conservative second and third son originating culture

And since they have always lived with large numbers of blacks they know what that means

Unlike those who do not but love to lecture us about how to deal with huge black population concentrations


24 posted on 09/25/2013 7:52:31 AM PDT by wardaddy (the next Dark Ages are coming as Western Civilization crumbles with nary a whimper)
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To: Venturer

I’d take a truly Christian black man or woman as a friend, over s secular/liberal white man/woman.

Of course I don’t care what race a person is.


25 posted on 09/25/2013 7:55:10 AM PDT by JSDude1 (Is John Boehner the Neville Chamberlain of American Politics?)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Well there’s no doubt about it...if you oppose preferential i.e unconstitutional treatment for selected groups of Americans, you’re just a nasty racist. Probably an ex-slave owner too. (snicker)


26 posted on 09/25/2013 8:15:45 AM PDT by driftless2
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