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1 - What Targeted Citizens Think

Racial Differences in Public Opinion on School Closures

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 March 2023

Sally A. Nuamah
Affiliation:
Northwestern University, Illinois
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Summary

Chapter 1 answers the question of what citizens perceptions of the school closure policy are and how these attitudes vary by race. It reveals that African Americans and Latinx citizens – the majority of those affected by the policy – have highly negative attitudes toward public school closures. Whites express the most supportive attitudes toward closure, despite rare experiences with the policy. To explain these disparities, it highlights how African Americans and Latinx shared experiences with previous education policies and shared status as minorities contribute to the development of a shared target identity. Their identification as shared targets result in similar assessments of the closure policy, regardless of whether they are directly affected by it. Whites, in contrast, adopt a viewpoint akin to the purveyors of the policy. These findings have implications for understanding the challenges associated with working across racial lines, toward improved race relations and thus democratic progress.

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Chapter
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Closed for Democracy
How Mass School Closure Undermines the Citizenship of Black Americans
, pp. 29 - 58
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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