Studies in public opinion : attitudes, nonattitudes, measurement error, and change /
In democratic societies, opinion polls play a vital role. But it has been demonstrated that many people do not have an opinion about major issues--the "nonattitudes" problem. Also, the framing of questions in different ways can generate very different estimates of public opinion--the "...
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Typ dokumentu: | Kniha |
Jazyk: | Angličtina |
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Princeton, NJ :
Princeton University Press,
[2018]
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Témata: | |
On-line přístup: | Elektronická verze přístupná pouze pro studenty a pracovníky MU |
Příbuzné jednotky: | Tištěná verze::
Studies in public opinion |
Obsah:
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
- PART I: A Synoptic Perspective
- CHAPTER 1: Different Judgment Models for Policy Questions: Competing or Complementary?
- CHAPTER 2: Separation of Error, Method Effects, Instability, and Attitude Strength
- PART II: The Problem of Ambivalence
- CHAPTER 3: Good, Bad, and Ambivalent: The Consequences of Multidimensional Political Attitudes
- CHAPTER 4: The Not-So-Ambivalent Public: Policy Attitudes in the Political Culture of Ambivalence
- PART III: Politics and Nonattitudes
- CHAPTER 5: The Structure of Political Argument and the Logic of Issue Framing
- CHAPTER 6: Floating Voters in U.S. Presidential Elections, 1948–2000
- PART IV: Attitude Strength and Attitude Stability
- CHAPTER 7: Importance, Knowledge, and Accessibility: Exploring the Dimensionality of Strength-Related Attitude Properties
- CHAPTER 8: Stability and Change of Opinion: The Case of Swiss Policy against Pollution Caused by Cars
- CHAPTER 9: Attitude Strength and Response Stability of a Quasi-Balanced Political Alienation Scale in a Panel Study
- PART V: An Alternative to the Standard Opinion Poll
- CHAPTER 10: Coping with the Nonattitudes Phenomenon: A Survey Research Approach
- CHAPTER 11: The Influence of Information on Considered Opinions: The Example of the Choice Questionnaire
- PART VI: Looking Forward
- CHAPTER 12: A Consistency Theory of Public Opinion and Political Choice: The Hypothesis of Menu Dependence
- Index