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Do All Black Lives Matter Equally to Black People? Respectability Politics and the Limitations of Linked Fate

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 February 2019

Tehama Lopez Bunyasi
Affiliation:
George Mason University
Candis Watts Smith*
Affiliation:
University of North Carolina–Chapel Hill
*
Address correspondence and reprint requests to: Candis Watts Smith, University of North Carolina–Chapel Hill, Abernethy Hall, 131 S. Columbia St., CB#3435, Chapel Hill, NC 27599. E-mail: cwsmith@unc.edu

Abstract

Cathy Cohen’s (1999) theory of secondary marginalization helps to explain why the needs of some members of Black communities are not prioritized on “the” Black political agenda; indeed, some groups are ignored altogether as mainstream Black public opinion shifts to the right (Tate 2010). However, the contemporary movement for Black Lives calls for an intersectional approach to Black politics. Its platform requires participants to take seriously the notion that since Black communities are diverse, so are the needs of its members. To what extent are Blacks likely to believe that those who face secondary marginalization should be prioritized on the Black political agenda? What is the role of linked fate in galvanizing support around these marginalized Blacks? To what extent does respectability politics serve to hinder a broader embrace of Blacks who face different sets of interlocking systems of oppression, such as Black women, formerly incarcerated Blacks, undocumented Black people, and Black members of LBGTQ communities in an era marked by Black social movements? We analyze data from the 2016 Collaborative Multi-Racial Post-Election Survey (CMPS) to assess whether all Black lives matter to Black Americans.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Section of the American Political Science Association 2019 
Figure 0

Figure 1. Level of Support for Addressing Challenges of Marginalized Groups.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Predicted Probability of High Support for Marginalized Groups Given Linked Fate.

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Figure 3. Predicted Probability of High Support for Marginalized Groups Given Family Prioritization.

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Figure 4. Predicted Probability of High Support for Marginalized Groups Given Adherence to Norms of Law and Order.

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Figure 5. Predicted Probability of High Support for Marginalized Groups. Given Endorsement of Respectability Politics (i.e. Combined Support of Two Parents Families and Law & Order).

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Table 1. Determinants of Support of Marginalized Groups

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Figure 6. Predicted Probability of High Support for Marginalized Groups given. High Linked Fate and Varying Endorsement of Respectability Politics.