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Responsiveness Bias in 51 American Communities
50
Citations
10
References
1977
Year
Political InequalityPublic PolicyUrban PolicyMajority InfluenceBiasMinority InfluencePublic OpinionSocial InfluenceResponsiveness BiasPolitical BehaviorSocial SciencesSocial ResponsivenessPublic ChoiceUrban PoliticsPolitical CompetitionPolitical SciencePublic Policy Preferences
This paper is concerned with responsiveness bias, a previously uninvestigated dimension of political inequality, which refers to the degree to which governments respond unequally to the public policy preferences of various community subpopulations (e.g., blacks, whites, upper-class and lower-class citizens). An empirical examination of responsiveness bias in the 51 cities of the Permanent Community Sample reveals that responsiveness is usually biased in favor of the advantaged (upper-SES, white) segments of the population, although a few cities exhibit bias in favor of the disadvantaged. An analysis of the environmental and political factors affecting responsiveness bias shows that larger, more wealthy cities, with well-organized interest groups having little minority representation, are most likely to bias their policies in ways preferred by the advantaged.
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