2021
DOI: 10.31235/osf.io/rfye8
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"I Don't Want Everybody to Vote": Christian Nationalism and Restricting Voter Access in the United States

Abstract: Though the persistence of voter suppression and disenfranchisement in the US is well-documented, we still know little about their contemporary ideological underpinnings beyond partisanship and racial resentment. Highlighting the Christian Right’s influence in driving anti-democratic sentiment in the post-Civil Rights era, we propose contemporary ideological support for restricting the vote generally, and specifically, to those who prove “worthy,” is undergirded by a pervasive ideology that cloaks authoritarian… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…We conclude by noting that although we have focused on theoretical and empirical concerns, the aims of prominent QCN literature are also explicitly normative. QCN scholars state that Christian nationalism is a threat to a pluralistic society that must be countered with a coordinated response (e.g., Perry et al 2022). We believe that establishing better delineated boundaries around the concept will serve this end.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…We conclude by noting that although we have focused on theoretical and empirical concerns, the aims of prominent QCN literature are also explicitly normative. QCN scholars state that Christian nationalism is a threat to a pluralistic society that must be countered with a coordinated response (e.g., Perry et al 2022). We believe that establishing better delineated boundaries around the concept will serve this end.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Christian nationalism has been linked to, nonexhaustively, white supremacy, patriarchy, xenophobia, heteronormativity, authoritarianism, militarism (Whitehead and Perry 2020), rejection of science (Baker, Perry, and Whitehead 2020), small-government libertarianism, antiglobalist populism (Perry, Whitehead, and Grubbs 2021), antidemocratic tendencies (Perry, Whitehead, and Grubbs 2022), social conservatism, Islamophobia, protofascism, and orientations toward cultural dominance (Whitehead and Perry 2020)—and this list continues to expand. QCN scholars argue that Christian nationalism is not only correlated with but shapes , drives , or undergirds these other attitudes (e.g., Perry, Whitehead, et al 2021; Perry et al 2022; Whitehead and Perry 2020). In some cases these claims go further, as when Whitehead and Perry (2020) wrote that Christian nationalism “ includes [italics added] assumptions of nativism, white supremacy, patriarchy, and heteronormativity along with divine sanctions for authoritarian control and militarism” (p. 10), thereby promoting these additional factors from outcomes to constitutive elements.…”
Section: Conceptualizing Christian Nationalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For example, partisans may view democratic principles that they support as fungible and worth sacrificing for competing values, such as power. And for many segments of the population (e.g., White Christians), for whom increasing diversity threatens political power, there may be a newfound tension between pro-democratic views and pro-group views [35][36][37][38] . This broader context may also help to explain why a willingness to subvert ostensibly held democratic values was higher among Republicans.…”
Section: Possible Causal Mechanismsmentioning
confidence: 99%