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Malevolent Leaders
A01=Stephen C Craig
Alachua County
American public opinion
Attitude Crystallization
Author_Stephen C Craig
Category=JP
citizen attitudes toward government
College Professors
Confidence Gap
Contemporary Discontent
Democratic Entitlement
democratic legitimacy
Diffuse Support
Direct Democracy
Elite Challenging Forms
elite versus mass perspectives
Energy Policy
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External Efficacy
feelings of mistrust
Governmental Decisionmakers
Governmental Responsiveness
IBE
Incumbent Authorities
Internally Efficacious
Low External Efficacy
Malevolent Leaders
NES Respondent
Perot's startling campaign
political culture change
political discontent
political trust
public opinion research
Responsiveness Items
Responsiveness Questions
Sixth Party System
survey methodology
Vice Versa
Young Man
Product details
- ISBN 9780367293727
- Weight: 600g
- Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
- Publication Date: 13 Sep 2019
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
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Trust in government dropped to a near-record low during the 1992 election as Ross Perot’s startling campaign illustrated all too graphically. Stephen Craig shows the trajectory of this popular discontent over the years and predicts that the “confidence gap” is not likely to close until citizens adjust their perceptions and expectations of government—a shift that would represent a major change in our political culture. Blending survey data and interviews with both elites and nonelites, Craig gives us a nuanced view of how people assess their leaders, how leaders see themselves, and how opinions converge and diverge on the issues that matter most: the economy, the environment, and, above all, the quality of our democracy.
Stephen C. Craig is associate professor of political science at the University of Florida as well as coordinator of the university’s graduate program in Political Campaigning and director of the Florida Institute for Research on Elections. He has published numerous articles on the nature of American public opinion and is currently putting together an edited volume that will examine the changing relationship between citizens and their governmental leaders, institutions, and the political process in general. Dr. Craig has worked extensively with both academic and political surveys and continues to do polling and focus group research for clients in Florida and elsewhere.
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