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21 Punishment & Soc'y 3 (2019)

handle is hein.journals/punscty21 and id is 1 raw text is: 



Article


                                                                     Punishment & Society
                                                                     2019, Vol. 21(1) 3-27
Conflicted            conservatives,                               @ The Author(s) 2017
                                                                   Article reuse guidelines:
punitive         views, and                                 sagepub.com/journals-permissions
                                                            DOI: 10.1177/1462474517736295
anti -B lack          racial                                 journals.sagepub.com/homelpun

bias 1974-20 14                                                             SAGE




Elizabeth K Brown
University of Massachusetts Boston, USA

Kelly   M  Socia
University of Massachusetts Lowell, USA

jasmine R Silver
University at Albany, SUNY, USA




Abstract
Research  suggests that the views of conflicted conservatives, Americans who self-
identify as conservative but express support  for liberal governmental policies and
spending, are particularly important in policymaking and politics because they are polit-
ically engaged and often act as swing voters. We examine punitive views among con-
flicted conservatives and other political subgroups in three distinct periods in the pol-
itics of punishment in America between 1974 and  2014. In particular, we consider the
punitive views of conflicted conservatives relative to consistent conservatives, moder-
ates, and liberals. Given the barrier that racialized typifications of violent crime may
pose to current criminal justice reform efforts, we also explore the role of anti-Black
bias in predicting punitive views among White Americans  across political subgroups.
Our  overall findings indicate that conflicted conservatives are like moderates in their
support for the death penalty and like consistent conservatives on beliefs about court
harshness. These  findings, and supplemental analyses on punitive views and  voting
behaviors across political subgroups, call into question whether conflicted conserva-
tives have acted as critical scorekeepers on penal policy issues. We also find that



Corresponding author:
Elizabeth K Brown, Sociology Department, University of Massachusetts Boston, 100 Morrissey Boulevard,
Boston, MA 02125, USA.
Email: Elizabeth.Brown@umb.edu

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