Southern Partisan Changes: When and How
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.15763/issn.2374-7781.1991.12.0.23-31Abstract
Davison and Krassa (1991) are correct in their observations about the shifts in the partisan loyalties of southern blacks and whites over the last generation. Their suggestion that party lines may, in time, reinforce racial lines remains premature and cannot be substantiated by the time period of their analysis. It is possible, however, that by the beginning of the next century, the general thrust of their suggestions may have come to pass. While Davison and Krassa and I (and a number of other analysts of southern politics, such as Carmines and Stimson 1989; Campbell, 1977) have come to similar conclusions about partisan realignment, we travel different paths. I am not convinced of the Davison- Krassa “white flight” explanation for the shift in partisan allegiance among white southerners. There are several factors that leave me doubtful.References
Beck, Paul Allen. 1977. Partisan Dealignment in the Post-War South. American Political Science Review 71:477-496. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0003055400267403 http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1978343
Black, Earl and Merle Black. 1987. Politics and Society in the South. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
Brace, Kimball, Bernard Grofman and Lisa Handley. 1987. Does Redistricting Aimed to Help Blacks Necessarily Help Republicans? Journal of Politics 49: 169-185.
Bullock, Charles S., III. 1981. Congressional Voting and the Mobilization of a Black Electorate in the South. Journal of Politics 43: 662-682.
_____________ . 1985. Congressional Roll Call Voting in a Two-Party South. Social Science Quarterly 66: 789-804.
_____________ . 1988. Regional Realignment: An Officeholding Perspective. Journal of Politics 50: 553-574.
_____________ and Ronald Keith Gaddie. 1991. Changing from Multi-Member to Single-Member Districts. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, IL.
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