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The Rational Southerner - Black Mobilization, Republican Growth, and the Partisan Transformation of the American South (Paperback)
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The Rational Southerner - Black Mobilization, Republican Growth, and the Partisan Transformation of the American South (Paperback)
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Since 1950, the South has undergone the most dramatic political
transformation of any region in the United States. The once
Solid-meaning Democratic-South is now overwhelmingly Republican,
and long-disenfranchised African Americans vote at levels
comparable to those of whites. In The Rational Southerner, M.V.
Hood III, Quentin Kidd, and Irwin L. Morris argue that local
strategic dynamics played a decisive and underappreciated role in
both the development of the Southern Republican Party and the
mobilization of the region's black electorate. Mobilized blacks who
supported the Democratic Party made it increasingly difficult for
conservative whites to maintain control of the Party's machinery.
Also, as local Republican Party organizations became politically
viable, the strategic opportunities that such a change provided
made the GOP an increasingly attractive alternative for white
conservatives. Blacks also found new opportunities within the
Democratic Party as whites fled to the GOP, especially in the deep
South, where large black populations had the potential to dominate
state and local Democratic Parties. As a result, Republican Party
viability also led to black mobilization. Using the theory of
relative advantage, Hood, Kidd, and Morris provide a new
perspective on party system transformation. Following a
theoretically-informed description of recent partisan dynamics in
the South, they demonstrate, with decades of state-level,
sub-state, and individual-level data, that GOP organizational
strength and black electoral mobilization were the primary
determinants of political change in the region. The authors'
finding that race was, and still is, the primary driver behind
political change in the region stands in stark contrast to recent
scholarship which points to in-migration, economic growth, or
religious factors as the locus of transition. The Rational
Southerner contributes not only to the study of Southern politics,
but to our understanding of party system change, racial politics,
and the role that state and local political dynamics play in the
larger context of national politics and policymaking.
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