Prejudice in Politics: Group Position, Public Opinion, and the Wisconsin Treaty Rights DisputeThis book presents a sociological study of how and why racial prejudice against members of a minority group comes to shape what happens to important political claims and aspirations of the group. Lawrence Bobo and Mia Tuan explore a lengthy controversy surrounding the fishing, hunting, and gathering rights of the Chippewa Indians in Wisconsin. The controversy started in 1974, when two Chippewa Indians were arrested for off-reservation fishing, and persisted into the 1990s. It involved the efforts of the Chippewa to assert their traditional spearfishing rights, which met with angry, racially charged responses from whites. |
Contents
Prologue | 1 |
Chapter 1 Linking Prejudice and Politics | 23 |
Foundations of the Treaty Rights Controversy | 48 |
Treaty Rights Salience and Public Opposition | 87 |
Group Position Injustice and Symbolic Racism | 132 |
Moving from Attitudes to Behavior | 174 |
Chapter 6 Race Politics as Group Position | 208 |
Appendix A Question Wording in the Chippewa Indian Treaty Rights Survey | 227 |
Appendix B Factorial Structure of Prejudice | 235 |
Notes | 245 |
251 | |
271 | |