Socially Shared Deprivation, Participation in Non-violent Protest, and the Approval of Violence: The Experience of American Blacks During the Nineteen Sixties |
Contents
DATA AND METHODS | 31 |
SOME DETERMINANTS OF PARTICIPATION | 54 |
DEPRIVATION | 82 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Advocacy of Violence Advocate Violence approval of violence approve of non-violent black friends black neighborhoods blacks to gain Blacks Who Advocate Chi Square Chi-Square Likelihood Ratio Class Identification D. F. Probability discrimination against blacks dominant groups experience of deprivation experience of job experience of police Experienced Job Discrimination Experienced Police Abuse Final Hierarchical Model final model gain their rights group theory individual experience Interracial Neighborhood Contact Intragroup Preference live in mixed lower class lower-class identifiers Middle Working Lower mixed neighborhoods modelled data Neighborhoods Who Approve Non-violent Activity non-violent protest Observed Police Abuse odds ratios original data participation in non-violent Perceived Job Discrimination Perception of Shared political protest proportion of blacks proportion of whites protest by blacks Racial Composition relationships between approval relative deprivation shared job discrimination Significance Test socially shared experience Total City Population violence by blacks violence is especially Violence to Gain white approval white friends whites in mixed