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Chapter 6 Public Opinion and Political Socialization
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Term not easily defined Often literally no majority opinion In public opinion, the “public” is usually a smaller segment of the populace. Public Opinion
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Usually taken from a sampling Pluralist in nature Public Opinion
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The politically relevant opinions held by ordinary citizens that they express openly Sometimes well informed and sometimes not Public Opinion
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Opinion Polls 1.Include a relatively small sample 2.Estimates populace views based on sample Measurement of Opinion
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3.Sample often chosen at random 4.Sampling errors can occur when not enough folks are polled News polls, Gallup Poll, etc. Measurement of Opinion
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1.Sampling errors 2.Questions worded in a biased manner 3.Unfamiliarity of polling sample to question Used and relied upon in American Government regardless of any problems. Problems with Polls
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The learning process by which people acquire their political opinions, beliefs and values. Usually starts in the family Lifelong process Political Socialization
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1.Family 2.Schools 3.Media Agents of Political Socialization
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4. Peers 5. Political institutions and leaders 6. Churches Agents of Political Socialization
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Ideology: a consistent pattern of political attitudes that stem from a core belief (example: belief in environmentalism) Ideology
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Political ideologies include liberals, conservatives, libertarians and populists (see p. 208 of text) Ideologies can change as times change Can be part of public opinion but not necessarily so Ideology
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Those that say that government should do more to solve the country’s problems, and say that government ought not support traditional values at the expense of less conventional ones. Liberals
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Those who think that government should be sparing in its programs; feel government should uphold traditional values. Largest percentage of US population Conservatives
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Those who are reluctant to use government either as a means of economic redistribution or as a means of favoring particular social values. Government doesn’t need to be deeply involved Libertarians
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Those who would use government both for the purpose of economic distribution and for the purpose of guarding traditional values. Populists
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Many citizens relate more to groups that they belong to rather than an ideology Examples of groups: church, economic class, region (Northwesterners), race, ethnicity, gender, and age. Sometimes groups can crosscut. Group Thinking
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An individual’s ingrained sense of loyalty to a political party The United States has a weak two party system, meaning that Democrats and Republicans are predominant but other parties (ex. Green) can exist too. Political Identification
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Public Opinion can influence policy Example: growing discussion on the environment has lead to an increase in hearings and discussion on what new policies need to exist. Public Policy
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