ID | 184473 |
Title Proper | Considering Black, Latino, Asian, and Pacific Islander opinion on foreign policy |
Language | ENG |
Author | Preuhs, Robert R ; Orbis Vol. 65, No.4; Fall 2021: p. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Most of the literature on racial or ethnic groups’ foreign policy preferences focuses on parochial or diasporic interests to demonstrate group-specific influence in this policy realm. This situation leaves room for addressing the impact of African American, Latino and Asian American, and Pacific Islander (AAPI) racial/ethnic identities on individual-level preferences for broader, non-parochial, foreign policy issues and the degree to which multiracial preference coalitions (or agreement) emerge in a fashion reflective of domestic policy attitudes. Utilizing data on a range of contemporary foreign policy issues from the 2018 and 2019 Congressional Cooperative Election Studies (CCES), the analyses reveal that minority preference coalitions emerge across a wide range of foreign policy issues, a pattern that is most dramatic among Latino and Black Democrats. Moreover, these coalitions suggest minority moderation relative to white co-partisans from both parties. |
`In' analytical Note | Orbis Vol. 65, No.4; Fall 2021: p.583-598 |
Journal Source | Orbis 2021-10 65, 4 |
Key Words | Asian ; Foreign Policy ; Considering Black ; Latino ; acific Islander Opinion ; AAPI |