The legacies of slavery have shaped nearly all aspects of American politics. Acharya, Blackwell, and Sen’s Deep Roots: How Slavery Shapes Southern Politics deploys sophisticated methods of causal inference to empirically identify one of these legacies: the enduring impact that slavery has had on white southerners’ racial attitudes. An important part of their causal argument is the role of the Civil War and Reconstruction, which they argue was the critical juncture when the distribution of white racial attitudes in the South began to diverge based on the prior pervasiveness of slavery. Before the secession crisis, they claim, white racial attitudes were unrelated to the level of enslavement within the South. We reconsider the evidence for this antebellum “homogeneity in racial attitudes” claim, which is critical to Acharya et al.’s strategy for identifying the causal effect of slavery and for their broader historical argument. Using multiple sources of data from different moments in southern history, we find that the pervasiveness of slavery was a systematically strong predictor of voting on slavery, secession, and the rights extended to free persons of color well-before the Civil War. Our findings suggest that there was no discrete moment at which the connection between the geographic pervasiveness of slavery and revealed commitments to white supremacy was established, raising questions about the causal identification strategies used by the authors. More generally, the findings point to some unappreciated limitations of design-based approaches when assignment to treatment is the product of a slow-moving complex historical process.
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17 May 2023
Research Article|
May 17 2023
Deeper Roots: Historical Causal Inference and the Political Legacy of Slavery Available to Purchase
David A. Bateman;
David A. Bateman
Department of Government, and the Jeb E. Brooks School of Public Policy, Cornell University
, 214 White Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA
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Eric Schickler
Eric Schickler
Travers Department of Political Science, University of California, Berkeley
, 210 Social Sciences Building, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA
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The helpful feedback of Avidit Acharya, Matthew Blackwell, Maya Sen, Devin Caughey, Jorge Mangonnet, Matthias Dilling, Chris Muller, Jake Grumbach, David Broockman, Paul Frymer, Tom Pepinsky, Dawn Teele, Suresh Naidu, Gregory Wawro, John Clegg, Marika Landau-Wells, Shigeo Hirano, Steven White, David Stasavage, and participants at the Yale American and Comparative Political Behavior Workshop and the Oxford Department of Politics Workshop, as well as several anonymous reviewers, is greatly appreciated.
Online ISSN: 2693-9304
Print ISSN: 2693-9290
© 2023 D. A. Bateman and E. Schickler
2023
D. A. Bateman and E. Schickler
Licensed re-use rights only
Journal of Historical Political Economy (2023) 3 (1): 95–124.
Citation
Bateman DA, Schickler E (2023), "Deeper Roots: Historical Causal Inference and the Political Legacy of Slavery". Journal of Historical Political Economy, Vol. 3 No. 1 pp. 95–124, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/115.00000047
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