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In this survey of political participation in seven nations -
Nigeria, Austria, Japan, India, the Netherlands, Yugoslavia and the
United States - the authors examine the relationship between
social, economic, and educational factors and political
participation. The book provides insight into an ongoing debate
among political scientists and sociologist: why is political
participation in some nations distributed evenly across economic,
social, and educational lines, whereas other nations foster
participation only by their privileged classes? The book treats
politics not only as a dependent variable influenced by
socioeconomic factors, but also as an independent variable that
affects levels of political participation through variations in
party systems and linkages between parties and other organizations.
Norman H. Nie, Jane Junn, and Kenneth Stehlik-Barry explore in this
volume the causal relationships between education and democratic
citizenship. They argue that citizenship encompasses both political
engagement in pursuit of political interests as well as commitment
to democratic values that temper what citizens are willing to do to
win in politics. Education affects these two dimensions in distinct
ways, influencing democratic enlightenment through cognitive
proficiency and sophistication, and political engagement through
position in social networks. For characteristics of enlightenment,
formal education simply adds to the degree to which citizens
support and are knowledgeable about democratic principles. But for
political engagement, education orders the distribution of social
position and connections, creating an inherently uneven political
playing field. The authors develop and test this model with data
from the 1990 Citizen Participation Study, along with pooled
cross-sectional survey data from the National Election Study and
the General Social Survey over the last quarter-century. Despite a
dramatic increase in educational attainment over this time period,
political engagement has not risen at a commensurate level.
Instead, as society becomes more educated, it takes more and more
education to reach a position in the social hierarchy that
facilitates political engagement. Alternatively, the same increases
in education in the American mass public have produced a more
tolerant and informed citizenry.
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