After Obama: African American Politics in a Post-Obama Era
After Obama: African American Politics in a Post-Obama Era
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Abstract
This book engages the reader in a wide-ranging assessment of the legacy of Barack Obama—the “first Black president”—relative to Black politics. It uses its vantage point of being written during Donald Trump’s presidency to understand what Black politics has and has not inherited from the Obama administration. It is comprehensive in the number of constituencies and policy topics it covers. Its co-editors frame its chapters by explaining how both “inverted linked fate” and an “inclusionary dilemma” shaped the Obama presidency and legacy for Black politics. Nearly twenty prominent or emerging political scientists provide this book’s interior chapters, using quantitative and qualitative methods to draw conclusions. The first group of scholars examines the Obama administration’s impact upon the attitudes and perceived group interests of various Black constituencies, including voters, partisans, civil rights leaders, lobbyists, women, church leaders and members, and LGBTQ persons. The second group examines Obama’s impact upon Black policy interests, including civil rights, criminal justice reform, antipoverty, women’s welfare, healthcare reform, housing, immigration, and foreign affairs. In the conclusion, the co-editors consider what may confront the “next Black president” and the “next Black America.”
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Introduction: There’s No Such Thing as a “Black President”
Todd C. Shaw and others
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Part I Constituencies
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1
Race, Trust, and the American Presidency: Black-White Confidence in the Executive Branch in the Obama Era and Beyond
Shayla C. Nunnally
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2
Invitations to the Dance: The Obama Administration’s Complex Engagement with Black Elected Officials and Advocacy Groups
Tyson D. King-Meadows
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3
The “Obama Effect” Revisited: A Macrolevel and Longitudinal Exploration of the Influence of Barack Obama’s Media Presence on Racialized Political Party Polarization
Ray Block andAngela K. Lewis-Maddox
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4
“It’s Complicated”: The Obama Administration’s Relationship with Black Faith Communities and Lessons for Future Presidents
Brian D. McKenzie
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5
Obama, African American Women, and the Limitations of the Politics of Recognition
Wendy G. Smooth
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6
Moving the Needle? Obama, Targeted Universalism, and the Black LGBTQ Community
Ravi K. Perry
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1
Race, Trust, and the American Presidency: Black-White Confidence in the Executive Branch in the Obama Era and Beyond
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Part II Public Policies
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7
Black Federal Judges and Civil Rights in the Age of Obama
Shenita Brazelton andDianne M. Pinderhughes
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8
Monumental Promises, Incremental Gains: Criminal Justice Reform in the Obama Era
Khalilah L. Brown-Dean
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9
What about Black Women? How Economic Policies Targeting Urban Americans Disappear Black Women
Julia S. Jordan-Zachery
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10
Barack Obama and the Racial Politics of the Affordable Care Act
Sekou Franklin and others
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11
Race, Real Estate, and Responsiveness: The Obama Administration’s Legacy on Housing Policy and Outcomes
Andra Gillespie
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12
The Obama Era and Black Attitudes toward Undocumented Immigration Policies
Lorrie Frasure andStacey Greene
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13
Foreign Policy during and after Barack Obama
Robert B. Packer
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Conclusion: The Next “Black President” and the Next Black Politics
Joseph P. McCormick II and others
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7
Black Federal Judges and Civil Rights in the Age of Obama
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End Matter
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