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Identifying psychological responses of stigmatized groups to referendums. | LitMetric

Identifying psychological responses of stigmatized groups to referendums.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

The Williams Institute, UCLA School of Law, Los Angeles, CA 90095.

Published: April 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Public votes on marginalized communities' rights occur regularly in 27 states, but the psychological effects on these groups have only recently been studied.
  • A study analyzed survey data from LGBT and non-LGBT individuals, focusing on the impact of same-sex marriage ads in different media markets, where some states had referendums while others did not.
  • Results show that LGBT individuals exposed to marriage equality ads experienced significantly more stress compared to those who were not exposed, highlighting how such campaigns can trigger both stress and resilience within marginalized communities.

Article Abstract

Public votes and referendums on the rights of marginalized communities are utilized in 27 states and occur with some regularity. However, research has only recently begun to examine the psychological consequences of these voter referendums for members of stigmatized groups, and a number of important questions remain regarding the internal validity and generalizability of the existing evidence. The current study advances this literature by combining survey data from a large probability-based sample conducted in 2012 [lesbian, gay, bisexual, and/or transgender (LGBT) = 939; non-LGBT = 31,067] with media market ad-buy data in states where marriage equality was on the ballot. Television media markets cross state boundaries, ensuring that there was an unintended group of people in 12 states who were exposed to the same-sex marriage discourse but who did not live in states with the voter referendum ("media market spillovers"). We take advantage of this unique data structure by comparing LGBT people in the media market spillovers to those residing in the same state but in nonspillover markets with no ad exposure. LGBT people are emotionally affected by these campaigns, and non-LGBT people are unaffected. LGBT people in markets with a cumulative total of 400 ads have a 34.0% greater probability of reporting stress than LGBT people not exposed to ads. Additionally, while the negative ads evoked sadness, positive ads evoked enjoyment and happiness. Thus, public votes on minority rights represent both a source of minority stress and resilience.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5899433PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1712897115DOI Listing

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