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Article
Latinos and the Skin Color Paradox: Skin Color, National Origin, and Political Attitudes
Sociology
  • James Faught
  • Margaret Hunter, Santa Clara University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-1-2012
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Disciplines
Abstract

For African Americans and Latinos, skin color is a significant predictor of many social and economic stratification variables including income, education, housing, occupational status, spousal status, poverty rates, criminal justice sentencing, and rates of depression. Given these patterns, some scholars have surprisingly found that skin color is not a significant predictor of many political attitudes for African Americans, and called this phenomenon the “skin color paradox.” This article investigates the role of skin color, race, and national origin in predicting political marginality and political commonality among Latinos. The models suggest that skin color is not a significant predictor of political attitudes, consistent with the skin color paradox theory but that national origin does predict some political attitudes.

Citation Information
Faught, J., & Hunter, M. L. (2012). Latinos and the Skin Color Paradox: Skin Color, National Origin, and Political Attitudes. The Sociological Quarterly, 53(4), 676–701. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1533-8525.2012.01251.x