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The Racial Geography of U.S. Public Opinion at the Punitive Turn

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 December 2024

Adriane Fresh*
Affiliation:
Duke University, USA

Abstract

A large literature considers the mid-century a key turning point in punitive public opinion in the United States. This article examines racial and geographic heterogeneity in changing public opinion during the mid-century using data on death penalty support from as early as 1953. I find that the punitive turn is characterized by divergence in death penalty support between Black and White people, and that White Southerners grew more supportive than Whites in the non-South from before to after the turn. Additional tests identify that this regional divergence is unlikely to have arisen by chance. Heterogeneity in partisanship and responsiveness to regional violent crime support is consistent with the idea that crime rates themselves were meaningful in punitive attitude formation only insofar as they were mediated by additional socio-political forces.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Section of the American Political Science Association
Figure 0

Figure 1. Trends in the homicide rate by race and region, 1900–1986.Source: Total from Klebba (1975), Table 2 and Figure 3, pgs. 197–198; race-by-region from volumes of Vital Statistics of the United States normalized by decennial census data from NHGIS. See Appendix H.Notes: The above plot shows homicide rates by the race of the victim per 100,000 of the relevant population. The total trend is age-adjusted and only available prior to 1975; while the race-by-region rates are not available with age adjustment. FBI Uniform Crime Report (UCR) trends are presented in Appendix H.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Aggregate support for the death penalty, 1953–1985.Notes: The above plot shows the population-weighted trends in the percentage of respondents supporting the death penalty.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Support for the death penalty by race, 1953–1985.Notes: The above plots (a) and (b) show the population-weighted trends in the percentage of respondents indicating support for the death penalty in the case of murder.

Figure 3

Table 1. Death penalty support as a function of race pre to post-1967

Figure 4

Figure 4. Support for the death penalty by region and race, 1953–1985.Notes: Plot (a) shows weighted data trends in the percentage of respondents indicating support for the death penalty in the case of murder. Plot (b) presents point estimates for the simple difference in means between White and Black respondents before (left) and (right) the inductively determined punitive turn (1967) between the South (black points) and non-South (light gray points).

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Table 2. Death penalty support as a function of race and geography pre- to post-1967

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Figure 5. Estimates of regional difference in punitive attitudes, 1953–1985.Notes: Plot (a) shows point estimates from 14 separate OLS estimations of ${\beta _1}$ from equation 2, the differential change in support for punitiveness by region for both the full sample (filled circles) and White-only sample (hollow circles). The models replace $south$ by alternative indicators equal to 1 for respondents in the named region and equal to zero otherwise. Plot (b) presents the distribution of simulated ${\beta _1}$ estimates from the Fisher exact test. The vertical line represents the estimate of the coefficient from Table 2.

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Table 3. Death penalty support as a function of heterogeneous responses to race-specific regional crime before to after 1967 by race and region

Figure 8

Figure 6. Trends in death penalty support by partisanship among White respondents in the South, 1953–1985.Notes: The above plot presents the population-weighted trends in support for the death penalty among White respondents in the South by their partisan identification. The vertical lines correspond to the partisan policy change identified by Kuziemko and Washington (2018), and the 1967 punitive turn. See also Appendix L.

Figure 9

Table 4. Death penalty support as a function partisanship among White Southern respondents, 1953–1985

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