Language and LGBTQ Politics: The Effect of Changing Group Labels on Public Attitudes

Philip Edward Jones
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Abstract

The labels used to describe sexual and gender minorities in the U.S. have shifted over time and become increasingly inclusive. Movement organizations have changed from describing the “lesbian, gay, and bisexual” (“LGB”) community to adding transgender (“LGBT”) and then also queer (“LGBTQ”) identities. Do these different labels affect public views of the group and support for their rights? I embedded a question wording experiment in a statewide survey, asking respondents about either LGB, LGBT, or LGBTQ people. The labels had no discernible effect on (1) support for requiring businesses to serve the group; nor (2) views of the group’s political leanings. There is no evidence that ideology and partisanship moderated these null effects: liberals and conservatives, Democrats and Republicans, were unaffected by the changing designations. This suggests public attitudes are not contingent on how the LGBTQ community is labelled, a finding with implications both for movement organizations and survey researchers.
语言与 LGBTQ 政治:改变群体标签对公众态度的影响
在美国,用于描述性少数群体和性别少数群体的标签随着时间的推移发生了变化,变得 越来越具有包容性。运动组织从描述 "女同性恋、男同性恋和双性恋"("LGB")群体,到增加变性人("LGBT"),再到同性恋("LGBTQ")身份。这些不同的标签是否会影响公众对该群体的看法以及对其权利的支持?我在一项全州范围的调查中嵌入了一个问题措辞实验,询问受访者关于 LGB、LGBT 或 LGBTQ 的看法。这些标签对(1)要求企业为该群体提供服务的支持率;(2)对该群体政治倾向的看法没有明显影响。没有证据表明意识形态和党派倾向对这些无效影响起到了调节作用:自由派和保守派、民主党人和共和党人都没有受到标签变化的影响。这表明,公众的态度并不取决于 LGBTQ 群体的标签方式,这一发现对运动组织和调查研究人员都有影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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