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The Power of Partisanship (Paperback)
Loot Price: R600
Discovery Miles 6 000
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The Power of Partisanship (Paperback)
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Was R657
Loot Price R600
Discovery Miles 6 000
You Save R57 (9%)
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Total price: R610
Discovery Miles: 6 100
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In The Power of Partisanship, Joshua J. Dyck and Shanna
Pearson-Merkowitz argue that the growth in partisan polarization in
the United States, and the resulting negativity voters feel towards
their respective opposition party, has far-reaching effects on how
Americans behave both inside and outside the realm of politics. In
fact, no area of social life in the United States is safe from
partisan influence. As a result of changes in the media landscape
and decades of political polarization, voters are stronger
partisans than in the past and are more likely to view the
opposition party with a combination of confusion, disdain, and
outright hostility. Yet, little of this hostility is grounded in
specific policy preferences. Even ideology lacks meaning in the
United States: conservative and liberal are what Republicans and
Democrats have labeled "conservative" and "liberal." Dyck and
Pearson-Merkowitz show how partisanship influences the electorate's
support for democratic norms, willingness to engage in risk related
to financial and healthcare decisions, interracial interactions,
and previously non-political decisions like what we like to eat for
dinner. Partisanship prevents people from learning from their
interactions with friends or the realities of their neighborhoods,
and even makes them oblivious to their own economic hardship. The
intensity and pervasiveness of partisanship in politics today has
resulted in "political knowledge" becoming an endogenous feature of
strong partisanship and a poor proxy for anything but partisan
behavior. Dyck and Pearson-Merkowitz present evidence that pure
independents are, in fact, very responsive to information because
they are not biased by partisan elite cues and important and
relevant political information is often local, contextual, and
personal. Drawing on a series of original surveys and experiments
conducted between 2014 and 2020, Dyck and Pearson-Merkowitz show
how the dominance of partisanship as a decision cue has
fundamentally transformed our understanding of both political and
non-political behavior.
General
Imprint: |
Oxford UniversityPress
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
September 2023 |
Authors: |
Joshua J. Dyck
(Professor and Chair of Political Science and Director of the Center for Public Opinion)
• Shanna Pearson-Merkowitz
(Saul I. Stern Professor of Civic Engagement and Associate Dean of Faculty Affairs in the School of Public Policy)
|
Dimensions: |
235 x 156mm (L x W) |
Format: |
Paperback
|
Pages: |
248 |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-19-762379-4 |
Categories: |
Books
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LSN: |
0-19-762379-4 |
Barcode: |
9780197623794 |
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