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Race, Ethnicity, and Immigration in the 2005 Mayoral Elections in Los Angeles and New York

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Abstract:

This paper uses the 2005 mayoral elections in New York and Los Angeles uses ecological regression analysis to examine patterns of turnout and candidate choice across various native born and immigrant ethnic groups. Important differences are found across and within the larger categories of white, black, Latino, and Asian groupings and between New York and LA. Paradoxically, the city that provides the greatest access of new immigrant groups to the lowest rung of the political system, representation on the city council, did not produce a Latino victory in the mayoral election. Possible reasons for this outcome are considered.

Most Common Document Word Stems:

citi (148), new (127), york (108), elect (106), 0.000 (97), los (91), angel (91), white (85), polit (84), black (79), group (77), mayor (75), 2005 (75), voter (65), 2001 (64), immigr (62), model (61), latino (60), 000 (55), support (51), hispan (48),

Author's Keywords:

Urban politics, immigrant political mobilization, race and ethnicity, New York, Los Angeles, elections
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Name: American Political Science Association
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MLA Citation:

Mollenkopf, John., Sonenshein, Raphael., Champeny, Ana. and Drayse, Mark. "Race, Ethnicity, and Immigration in the 2005 Mayoral Elections in Los Angeles and New York" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Marriott, Loews Philadelphia, and the Pennsylvania Convention Center, Philadelphia, PA, Aug 31, 2006 <Not Available>. 2011-03-13 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p152088_index.html>

APA Citation:

Mollenkopf, J. H., Sonenshein, R. J., Champeny, A. and Drayse, M. , 2006-08-31 "Race, Ethnicity, and Immigration in the 2005 Mayoral Elections in Los Angeles and New York" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Marriott, Loews Philadelphia, and the Pennsylvania Convention Center, Philadelphia, PA Online <PDF>. 2011-03-13 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p152088_index.html

Publication Type: Proceeding
Abstract: This paper uses the 2005 mayoral elections in New York and Los Angeles uses ecological regression analysis to examine patterns of turnout and candidate choice across various native born and immigrant ethnic groups. Important differences are found across and within the larger categories of white, black, Latino, and Asian groupings and between New York and LA. Paradoxically, the city that provides the greatest access of new immigrant groups to the lowest rung of the political system, representation on the city council, did not produce a Latino victory in the mayoral election. Possible reasons for this outcome are considered.

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Associated Document Available Political Research Online
Associated Document Available American Political Science Association

Document Type: PDF
Page count: 39
Word count: 13080
Text sample:
1 Race Ethnicity and Immigration in the 2005 Mayoral Elections in Los Angeles and New York by John Mollenkopf Ana Champeny Raphael Sonenshein and Mark Drayse Prepared for Panel 30-3 “Group Mobilization Partisanship Ideas and Leadership: The Los Angeles and New York Mayoral Elections of 2005 ” 10:15 AM Saturday September 2 2006 at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association Philadelphia Introduction The nation’s first and second largest cities provide a home to highly diverse populations
-.319 -.126 .000 Filipino race .011 .003 .870 Indian race -.102 .008 .698 Born in Iran -.076 -.021 .313 Born in Russia 1.033 .084 .000 Armenian ancestry .290 .090 .000 Adjusted R2 .245 .535 .556 Std Error 9.98 7.83 7.65 TO COME: Maps 1 and 2


Similar Titles:
African Americans in the 2005 Mayoral Election in New York City

Pushing and Pulling Towards Coalition: African American Voters and the 2005 Los Angeles Mayoral Election

Black and White Americans and Latino Immigrants: A Preliminary Look at Attitudes in Three Southern Cities


 
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