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BRIAN J. GAINES Scholars have recently highlighted a critical, but previously
neglected, facet of racially discriminatory public policies-such policies
may be motivated by either economic or psychological forces. That is,
racially discriminatory policy may be the result of self-interest and
competition in the face of scarcity or prejudices and affects based on
group identities. We test if these motivations were behind the passage
of an important, openly discriminatory public policy: California's Alien
Land Law of 1920. We find that neither motivation alone accounts for the
initiative vote that passed this law; both played a role. Our analysis
also illustrates how racially discriminatory policies in the early 20th
century fit into the ordinary politics of the day. |
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