{"title":"种族与讲坛:美国总统和对美国平等的追求","authors":"Rodney E. Hero, Alvin B. Tillery","doi":"10.1017/rep.2021.27","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In calling for articles for this special issue we sought to feature the institution of the US presidency and its implications for racial and ethnic politics in the United States. It was our sense that the race, ethnicity, and politics (REP) literature would benefit from such an emphasis by increasing and complementing the modest amount of extant research on the presidency within the subfield. At the time, bringing in racial dimensions would enrich the presidency research. While presidency scholars have often used case studies about issues racial and ethnic politics to develop theories about the functioning of the institution (see, for example, Graham, 1990; Milkis et al., 2013; Tichenor, 2016), presidential studies writ large has been slow to adopt core theoretical perspectives from the REP subfield. Similarly, the insights from the rich tradition of research on the US presidency propagated by pioneering scholars of color—like Barnett (1983), Walters (1988), and Walton (1985) has been largely unrecognized and underappreciated. Since behaviorism emerged as the dominant approach to the study of racial and ethnic politics in the 1970s. The election of Barrack Hussain Obama as the 44th president in 2008 generated a resurgent interest in the presidency and the role that the institution plays in racial and ethnic politics with the REP subfield (Tesler and Sears 2010; Sanchez et al., 2012; Smith, 2013; Price, 2016; Tillery, 2019). Our goal with this volume is to support this burgeoning movement. To that end, we have sought to prompt, promote, and to provide critical assessment of the extent and the ways in which “presidential-related” activities—including presidents, presidential administrations, policies, as well as election processes— acknowledge, engage, frame, or conceptualize ideas, and emphasize (or ignore) social factors, public policies, as structured by factors relevant to race and racial equality (or inequality) in US politics. Our goal is to spur the growth of presidential research in the REP subfield to rival the rich traditions that the field maintains in Congressional studies (Minta, 2011; Wallace, 2014; Tate 2018) and State and Local politics (Browning et al., 1986; Grimshaw, 1995; Hero 1998). The six articles that comprise this special issue have risen to the challenge of our call. They fall roughly into three very common trajectories of research on the US","PeriodicalId":37190,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Race, Ethnicity and Politics","volume":"21 1","pages":"473 - 477"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-10-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Race and the Bully Pulpit: The U.S. Presidency and the Quest of Equality in America\",\"authors\":\"Rodney E. Hero, Alvin B. Tillery\",\"doi\":\"10.1017/rep.2021.27\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"In calling for articles for this special issue we sought to feature the institution of the US presidency and its implications for racial and ethnic politics in the United States. It was our sense that the race, ethnicity, and politics (REP) literature would benefit from such an emphasis by increasing and complementing the modest amount of extant research on the presidency within the subfield. At the time, bringing in racial dimensions would enrich the presidency research. While presidency scholars have often used case studies about issues racial and ethnic politics to develop theories about the functioning of the institution (see, for example, Graham, 1990; Milkis et al., 2013; Tichenor, 2016), presidential studies writ large has been slow to adopt core theoretical perspectives from the REP subfield. Similarly, the insights from the rich tradition of research on the US presidency propagated by pioneering scholars of color—like Barnett (1983), Walters (1988), and Walton (1985) has been largely unrecognized and underappreciated. Since behaviorism emerged as the dominant approach to the study of racial and ethnic politics in the 1970s. The election of Barrack Hussain Obama as the 44th president in 2008 generated a resurgent interest in the presidency and the role that the institution plays in racial and ethnic politics with the REP subfield (Tesler and Sears 2010; Sanchez et al., 2012; Smith, 2013; Price, 2016; Tillery, 2019). Our goal with this volume is to support this burgeoning movement. To that end, we have sought to prompt, promote, and to provide critical assessment of the extent and the ways in which “presidential-related” activities—including presidents, presidential administrations, policies, as well as election processes— acknowledge, engage, frame, or conceptualize ideas, and emphasize (or ignore) social factors, public policies, as structured by factors relevant to race and racial equality (or inequality) in US politics. Our goal is to spur the growth of presidential research in the REP subfield to rival the rich traditions that the field maintains in Congressional studies (Minta, 2011; Wallace, 2014; Tate 2018) and State and Local politics (Browning et al., 1986; Grimshaw, 1995; Hero 1998). The six articles that comprise this special issue have risen to the challenge of our call. They fall roughly into three very common trajectories of research on the US\",\"PeriodicalId\":37190,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Journal of Race, Ethnicity and Politics\",\"volume\":\"21 1\",\"pages\":\"473 - 477\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2021-10-28\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Journal of Race, Ethnicity and Politics\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1017/rep.2021.27\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q1\",\"JCRName\":\"Social Sciences\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Race, Ethnicity and Politics","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1017/rep.2021.27","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
在为本期特刊征集文章时,我们试图以美国总统制度及其对美国种族和民族政治的影响为特色。我们的感觉是,种族、民族和政治(REP)文献将受益于这样的强调,通过增加和补充该子领域内现有的少量关于总统的研究。当时,引入种族因素会丰富总统研究。虽然总统学者经常使用有关种族和民族政治问题的案例研究来发展有关该机构运作的理论(例如,参见Graham, 1990;Milkis et al., 2013;Tichenor, 2016),总统研究在采用REP子领域的核心理论观点方面进展缓慢。同样,由巴内特(Barnett, 1983)、沃尔特斯(Walters, 1988)和沃尔顿(Walton, 1985)等有色人种先驱学者传播的关于美国总统的丰富研究传统的见解,在很大程度上没有得到认可和重视。自从行为主义在20世纪70年代成为研究种族和民族政治的主要方法以来。2008年巴拉克·侯赛因·奥巴马当选为第44任总统,重新激起了人们对总统职位以及该机构在REP子领域的种族和民族政治中所起作用的兴趣(特斯勒和西尔斯2010;Sanchez et al., 2012;史密斯,2013;价格,2016;Tillery, 2019)。我们这本书的目标是支持这一蓬勃发展的运动。为此,我们试图提示、促进并提供对“总统相关”活动(包括总统、总统行政部门、政策以及选举过程)承认、参与、框架或概念化思想的程度和方式的批判性评估,并强调(或忽视)社会因素、公共政策,这些因素是由美国政治中与种族和种族平等(或不平等)相关的因素构成的。我们的目标是促进总统研究在REP子领域的发展,以与该领域在国会研究中保持的丰富传统相抗衡(Minta, 2011;华莱士,2014;Tate 2018)以及州和地方政治(Browning et al., 1986;格,1995;英雄1998)。本期特刊的六篇文章响应了我们的号召。它们大致可以分为三种非常常见的美国研究轨迹
Race and the Bully Pulpit: The U.S. Presidency and the Quest of Equality in America
In calling for articles for this special issue we sought to feature the institution of the US presidency and its implications for racial and ethnic politics in the United States. It was our sense that the race, ethnicity, and politics (REP) literature would benefit from such an emphasis by increasing and complementing the modest amount of extant research on the presidency within the subfield. At the time, bringing in racial dimensions would enrich the presidency research. While presidency scholars have often used case studies about issues racial and ethnic politics to develop theories about the functioning of the institution (see, for example, Graham, 1990; Milkis et al., 2013; Tichenor, 2016), presidential studies writ large has been slow to adopt core theoretical perspectives from the REP subfield. Similarly, the insights from the rich tradition of research on the US presidency propagated by pioneering scholars of color—like Barnett (1983), Walters (1988), and Walton (1985) has been largely unrecognized and underappreciated. Since behaviorism emerged as the dominant approach to the study of racial and ethnic politics in the 1970s. The election of Barrack Hussain Obama as the 44th president in 2008 generated a resurgent interest in the presidency and the role that the institution plays in racial and ethnic politics with the REP subfield (Tesler and Sears 2010; Sanchez et al., 2012; Smith, 2013; Price, 2016; Tillery, 2019). Our goal with this volume is to support this burgeoning movement. To that end, we have sought to prompt, promote, and to provide critical assessment of the extent and the ways in which “presidential-related” activities—including presidents, presidential administrations, policies, as well as election processes— acknowledge, engage, frame, or conceptualize ideas, and emphasize (or ignore) social factors, public policies, as structured by factors relevant to race and racial equality (or inequality) in US politics. Our goal is to spur the growth of presidential research in the REP subfield to rival the rich traditions that the field maintains in Congressional studies (Minta, 2011; Wallace, 2014; Tate 2018) and State and Local politics (Browning et al., 1986; Grimshaw, 1995; Hero 1998). The six articles that comprise this special issue have risen to the challenge of our call. They fall roughly into three very common trajectories of research on the US