We Are Still Here: Omission and Perceived Discrimination Galvanized Civic Engagement Among Native Americans

Author:

Dai J. Doris1ORCID,Yellowtail Jamie L.2,Munoz-Salgado Ariana2,Lopez Julisa J.2,Ward-Griffin Emma3ORCID,Hawk Crystal Echo4,LeBlanc Judith5,Santos Nikki6,Farero Adam2,Eason Arianne E.3,Fryberg Stephanie A.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, University of Washington

2. Department of Psychology, University of Michigan

3. Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley

4. IllumiNative, Tulsa, OK

5. Native Organizers Alliance, Seattle, WA

6. Center for Native American Youth, The Aspen Institute, Washington, DC

Abstract

Leading up to the 2020 U.S. presidential election, Native American organizations and tribes launched get-out-the-vote campaigns that motivated Native peoples to vote in record numbers and helped flip battleground states. We conducted four studies (total N = 11,661 Native American adults) to examine the social and cultural factors explaining this historic Native civic engagement (e.g., campaigning). Results revealed that the more participants identified as being Native, the more they reported (a) engaging in civic activities, including get-out-the-vote behaviors during the 2020 election (Study 1); (b) civic engagement more broadly across a 5-year period (pilot study, Study 2); and (c) intentions to engage in civic activities in the future (Study 3). Moreover, participants who more strongly identified as Native were more likely to recognize the omission of their group from society and perceive greater group discrimination, which both independently and serially predicted greater civic engagement. These results suggest that leveraging the link between Native identification and group injustices can motivate action.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology

Reference62 articles.

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5. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2020, August 19). CDC data show disproportionate COVID-19 impact in American Indian/Alaska Native populations. https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2020/p0819-covid-19-impact-american-indian-alaska-native.html

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