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Gender and Black Presidential Politics: Chisholm to Moseley Braun

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Abstract:

These are comments presented at a roundtable on Black Pesidential Bids in 2004: Their Significance and Impact in the American Political Process.

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black (92), braun (42), moseley (39), sharpton (32), women (25), vote (24), chisholm (23), candid (21), american (21), moseley-braun (21), state (19), na (18), percent (18), voter (17), democrat (17), poll (17), support (16), presidenti (16), would (16), run (15), kerri (15),
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Name: American Political Science Association
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MLA Citation:

McClain, Paula. "Gender and Black Presidential Politics: Chisholm to Moseley Braun" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Hilton Chicago and the Palmer House Hilton, Chicago, IL, Sep 02, 2004 <Not Available>. 2009-05-26 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p60718_index.html>

APA Citation:

McClain, P. D. , 2004-09-02 "Gender and Black Presidential Politics: Chisholm to Moseley Braun" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Hilton Chicago and the Palmer House Hilton, Chicago, IL Online <.PDF>. 2009-05-26 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p60718_index.html

Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript
Review Method: Peer Reviewed
Abstract: These are comments presented at a roundtable on Black Pesidential Bids in 2004: Their Significance and Impact in the American Political Process.

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Associated Document Available Political Research Online

Document Type: .PDF
Page count: 23
Word count: 4257
Text sample:
Gender and Black Presidential Politics: From Chisholm to Moseley Braun Revisited Comments on Roundtable on Blacks and Presidential Politics American Political Science Association meeting September 1-5 2004 Chicago IL. Paula D. McClain Duke University Department of Political Science P. O. Box 90204 Durham NC 27708-0204 Email: paula.mcclain@duke.edu Note: These are remarks prepared for presentation at a roundtable and not a formal paper. At the 2003 APSA meeting we had a panel on this same issue with most of the
qualified black male presidential candidate to a more qualified black female candidate. Moreover I am not able to empirically answer the question of whether gender attitudes toward black female candidates have changed since Shirley Chisholm's presidential run 21 in 1972 but the data are suggestive. Though the exit polls and actual voting data are anything but conclusive they do seem to suggest that Sharpton was generally in a better position than Moseley-Braun among voters and even among African-American voters


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The Valence Advantage of Presidential Persuasion: How Presidential Candidates Use Oratorical Skills to Persuade Voters to Vote Contrary to Ideological Preferences

Black Power and Rainbow Dreams in the Presidential Bids of Sharpton and Moseley Braun


 
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