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Going Negative (Paperback, Ed)
Loot Price: R477
Discovery Miles 4 770
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Going Negative (Paperback, Ed)
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Loot Price R477
Discovery Miles 4 770
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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One of those books destined to be more talked about than read: Two
political scientists offer an interesting take on negative
advertising in election campaigns. Ansolabehere (MIT) and Iyengar
(UCLA) showed both actual TV spots and ads that they designed
themselves to 3,500 adults during six California races, then asked
a battery of questions to gauge responses to positive and negative
tones. The surprising conclusions: "Attack ads" impart valuable
information to voters about candidates' positions; they tend to
reinforce voters' partisan predispositions rather than persuade
them to change their views, and thus are not truly manipulative;
and their most significant effect is to decrease voter turnout,
especially among independent voters, by magnifying cynicism about
the entire system. The authors decry the loss of these generally
centrist nonpartisan voters, which they claim has led to the
polarization of the Democratic and Republican parties; they do not
address the issue of whether the nation would really benefit from
greater involvement by citizens who get most of their political
information from 30-second television commercials. Their remedy -
strengthening the two major parties - appears to largely contradict
the book's most controversial finding, that decreased turnout
actually benefits the GOP, whose prevailing ideology depends on
hostility to government. Readers will continually have to struggle
past the stolid prose and noisy charts; and those who doubt the
efficacy of "controlled experiments" by social scientists will have
to suspend disbelief; one must assume, for example, that people for
whom $15 is sufficient inducement to drive across Los Angeles in
order to watch television are representative of the national
electorate. While some of the results here are intriguing, most
readers will no doubt prefer having the contents filtered by their
favorite pundits. (Kirkus Reviews)
Political advertising has been called the worst cancer in American
society. Ads cost millions, and yet the entire campaign season is
now filled with nasty and personal attacks. In this landmark
six-year study, two of the nation's leading political scientists
show exactly how cancerous the ad spot has become. 16
illustrations.
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