This is not the latest version of this Digital Research Object (DRO). The latest version can be found here!
Supplementary materials for: Black Hope Floats: Racial Emotion Regulation and the Uniquely Motivating Effects of Hope on Black Political Participation
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Phoenix, Davin
Other kind(s) of contributor
University of California, Irvine
Abstract / Description
Supplementary materials for: Phoenix, D. (2020). Black Hope Floats: Racial Emotion Regulation and the Uniquely Motivating Effects of Hope on Black Political Participation. Journal of Social and Political Psychology.
Drawing upon theories of group based emotion, group based efficacy and appraisal, I propose a model of racial emotion regulation to explain variations in how Black and White Americans respond emotionally and behaviorally to policy opportunity cues. I test the major claims of this model with data from an original experiment and national survey. Findings from the studies indicate that expressions of hope carry a strong and consistent mobilizing effect on the political participation of African Americans, while producing null effects on White participation. I discuss the implications of this model for our understanding of the potential of hope to shape appraisals and perceptions of efficacy among socially marginalized groups, opening up a distinct pathway through which they can be mobilized for political engagement.
Keyword(s)
emotion hope race collective efficacy racial emotion regulation participation appraisalPersistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2020-08
Publisher
PsychOpen GOLD
Is referenced by
Citation
-
Phoenix JSPP BlackHopeFloats Figure1.pngimage/png - 92.65KBMD5: cfae0286b982be9ac84e7afa4e8d1debDescription: Figure 1: Racial emotion regulation model—Illustrating the effect of hope on group efficacy and behavior
-
Phoenix JSPP BlackHopeFloats Figure2.pngimage/png - 51.68KBMD5: e4d0f5baae8fd30f6d056a9248725a06Description: Figure 2: Predicted probability plots—marginal effects of hope on vote likelihood, across Democrat race and election years. Includes 95% confidence intervals
-
Phoenix JSPP BlackHopeFloats Figure A1.pngimage/png - 1.17MBMD5: b94c1038ce327787fd089d3357e4f3e9Description: Figure A1: Control and opportunity treatment flyers
-
Phoenix JSPP BlackHopeFloats Figure A2.pngimage/png - 21.31KBMD5: 6b48516606c7713fd18eb9f3fc9a256cDescription: Figure A2: Figure A3: Structural equation model, opportunity condition. Thin lines represent nonsignificant pathways
-
22020-09-30The update of 30-09-2020 contains all Supplementary Materials in a single file to provide readers with a one-stop-source.
-
12020-08-04
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Phoenix, Davin
-
Other kind(s) of contributorUniversity of California, Irvineen
-
PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2020-08-04T09:13:45Z
-
Made available on2020-08-04T09:13:45Z
-
Date of first publication2020-08
-
Abstract / DescriptionSupplementary materials for: Phoenix, D. (2020). Black Hope Floats: Racial Emotion Regulation and the Uniquely Motivating Effects of Hope on Black Political Participation. Journal of Social and Political Psychology.en
-
Abstract / DescriptionDrawing upon theories of group based emotion, group based efficacy and appraisal, I propose a model of racial emotion regulation to explain variations in how Black and White Americans respond emotionally and behaviorally to policy opportunity cues. I test the major claims of this model with data from an original experiment and national survey. Findings from the studies indicate that expressions of hope carry a strong and consistent mobilizing effect on the political participation of African Americans, while producing null effects on White participation. I discuss the implications of this model for our understanding of the potential of hope to shape appraisals and perceptions of efficacy among socially marginalized groups, opening up a distinct pathway through which they can be mobilized for political engagement.en
-
Publication statusacceptedVersionen
-
Review statuspeerRevieweden
-
SponsorshipThis research was supported in part by a grant from the Alliances for Graduate Education and the Professoriate (AGEP).en
-
Table of contentsFigure 1: Racial emotion regulation model—Illustrating the effect of hope on group efficacy and behavior; Figure 2: Predicted probability plots—marginal effects of hope on vote likelihood, across Democrat race and election years. Includes 95% confidence intervals; Figure A1: Control and opportunity treatment flyers; Figure A2: Figure A3: Structural equation model, opportunity condition. Thin lines represent nonsignificant pathwaysen
-
Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/2770
-
Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.3154
-
Language of contenteng
-
PublisherPsychOpen GOLDen
-
Is referenced byhttp://dx.doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.3153
-
Is related tohttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.3153
-
Keyword(s)emotionen
-
Keyword(s)hopeen
-
Keyword(s)raceen
-
Keyword(s)collective efficacyen
-
Keyword(s)racial emotion regulationen
-
Keyword(s)participationen
-
Keyword(s)appraisalen
-
Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
-
TitleSupplementary materials for: Black Hope Floats: Racial Emotion Regulation and the Uniquely Motivating Effects of Hope on Black Political Participationen
-
DRO typeother