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09 June 2022
August 22, 2022
American Identity
Our recent survey found deep appreciation among Americans for the civil rights movement and broad support for teaching about the movement and its legacy, despite polarized debates about race and the teaching of American history in today’s public discourse.
May/June 2022 Survey
Polling Firm: YouGov
Sample Size: n=2,500 US Adults (nationally representative)
Fieldwork Dates: May 17-June 3, 2022
Margin of Error: +/- 2.0 for US avg.
August 2022 Survey
Polling Firm: YouGov
Sample Size: n=1,000 US Adults (nationally representative, oversample of n=50 Asian Americans)
Fieldwork Dates: August 2-8, 2022
Margin of Error: +/- 3.1 for US avg.
In January 2022, More in Common launched an online community of approximately 400 Americans titled “Americans in Conversation”. We engage them in an online survey platform. From March 11-21, 2022, we asked Americans about American history. A total of N=257 US participants completed the activity, with participants roughly representative across US Census demographics such as age, gender, race, and partisanship.
of Americans believe that the civil rights movement advanced the values of freedom and equality in the US.
of Americans believe that the civil rights movement is an important example of Americans exercising their right to protest.
The civil rights movement is one of the most lauded historical events and political movements across the US and around the world; yet, almost 60 years after the historical March on Washington on August 28, 1963, we are still reeling with “the jangling discords of our nation” and feel so far away from turning it into “a beautiful symphony of brotherhood” – a transformation Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. had hoped for in his “I Have a Dream” speech. We see divisions spreading to debates on our common identity, intensified by increasingly vitriolic exchanges among politicians and pundits on which stories of America deserve to be told.
Our data finds another story. Despite our many disagreements, most Americans share a deep appreciation for the civil rights movement and the values of freedom and equality the movement epitomizes. Beneath the news headlines on debates around the teaching of American history, Americans share a common desire to have our students learn more about the civil rights movement – not only the progress, but also the struggles and obstacles that activists faced.
It is our hope that this report provides another angle of how we can commemorate the past, and that amidst the “jangling discords” of our times, we find more lasting choruses of commonality and respite.
Explore the depth of our research at your fingertips. Get the complete insights by downloading the full report today.
What unites and divides Americans today? This newsletter takes a closer look at issues pressing on America’s social and political fabric and provides recommendations for how to strengthen ties to keep us bound together.