Hb. Sirgo et R. Eisenman, ATTITUDES TOWARD THE GOVERNMENT HELPING BLACKS - THE SOUTH VERSUS THEREST OF THE NATION, Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society, 31(5), 1993, pp. 454-456
Data on racial attitudes are studied, specifically on whether or not t
he government should help blacks. A survey was made of a national repr
esentative sample of 880 people who voted in the 1988 national electio
ns. The results show the South to be different from the rest of the na
tion, with the South having both more people against government help o
f blacks but also more people favoring government help of blacks. The
other regions tend to be neutral on the issue, but lean toward the no-
help end of the scale. Thus, the South is unlike other regions, having
a bipolar distribution on the issue of government help for blacks. Th
is is true for both black and white Southerners. However, black Southe
rners were somewhat different from blacks outside the South.