The Racial Reckoning That Wasn’t : Code Switch : NPR


[ad_1]

Friends Jennifer Chudy, an assistant professor of political science at Wellesley College who studies white public opinion around race, and Hakeem Jefferson, an assistant professor at Stanford University, scoured public opinion data together in order to write an essay for the New York Times last May called: “Support for the Black Lives Matter Movement Surged Last Year: Did It Last?”

Lisa Abitbol; Harrison Truong/NPR


hide caption

toggle caption

Lisa Abitbol; Harrison Truong/NPR


Friends Jennifer Chudy, an assistant professor of political science at Wellesley College who studies white public opinion around race, and Hakeem Jefferson, an assistant professor at Stanford University, scoured public opinion data together in order to write an essay for the New York Times last May called: “Support for the Black Lives Matter Movement Surged Last Year: Did It Last?”

Lisa Abitbol; Harrison Truong/NPR

In the wake of several high-profile police killings last summer, support for Black Lives Matter skyrocketed among white Americans. Their new concerns about racism pushed books about race to the top of the bestseller lists, while corporations pledged billions of dollars to address injustice. A year later, though, polls show that white support for the movement has not only waned, but is lower than it was before. On this episode, two researchers explain why last year so-called racial reckoning was always shakier than it looked.

This episode was fact-checked by Summer Thomad, with production assistance from Sam Yellowhorse Kesler.

[ad_2]


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *