No Access
Ethnic Stratification and Political Cleavage in the United States, 1952-68
Abstract
Data from national survey samples show a small and declining covariation of ethnic prestige and party identification. Controls for socioeconomic stratification fail to eliminate the relationship, but controls for father's party or respindent's religion reduce the net effect of ethnic prestige to insignificance. The finding support a model of "cultural lag" in which the effects of ethnicity on politics persist via an intergenerational socialization of traditional ethnic group loyalties.




