Divisive or Descriptive?: How Americans Understand Critical Race Theory

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2024-01-01

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Abstract

Critical Race Theory (CRT) has become a flashpoint of elite political discord, yet how Americans actually perceive CRT is unclear. We theorize that Republican elites utilized a strong framing strategy to re-define CRT as an "empty signifier"representing broader racial and cultural grievances. Using a survey and a pre-registered experiment among U.S. adults (N = 19,060), we find that this strategy worked. Republicans exhibit more familiarity with CRT and hold more negatively valenced (and wide ranging) sentiments toward CRT, relative to Democrats. Moreover, compared to teaching the legacy of racism in schools, Republicans are significantly more opposed to teaching CRT while Democrats express greater uncertainty. Our findings suggest that by framing CRT as a broad term that envelopes many grievances (including those beyond the scope of CRT), Republican elites have shaped a subset of Americans' understanding of and attitudes toward CRT.

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10.1017/rep.2023.39

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Safarpour, A, K Lunz Trujillo, J Green, CH Pippert, J Lin and JN Druckman (2024). Divisive or Descriptive?: How Americans Understand Critical Race Theory. Journal of Race, Ethnicity and Politics. pp. 1–25. 10.1017/rep.2023.39 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/30202.

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Green

Jon Green

Assistant Professor of Political Science

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