Opinions, Publics and Pressure Groups

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A01=Gerald Studdert-Kennedy
A01=Graeme C. Moodie
attitude surveys
Author_Gerald Studdert-Kennedy
Author_Graeme C. Moodie
Britain
Broadcasting Committee
Category=JPA
Census
Classical Democratic Theory
contemporary politics
democratic theory
empirical political analysis
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Faulty Appraisal
Follow
Government
Government Social Survey
industrial society
interest group influence
Labour Party
Mechanical Parallelogram
National Science Policy
Nuclear Disarmament
opinion polls
political behaviour
political sociology
political theory
Pressure Group Activity
Pressure Group System
pressure groups
Promotional Groups
public opinion formation in democracies
rational in politics
Rent Act
representative democracy
representative government
Salient Reference Group
social psychology politics
Subjective Group Identification
Trend Committee
United States
USA
VIP
Voter Irrationality
voting
voting behaviour
Vox
West Germany
Working Class Conservative Voting
Working Class Labour Voter
Working Class Tories

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032129365
  • Weight: 180g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Nov 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In the late 1960s representative democracy was under fire from various directions even in countries, like Britain and America, where it had appeared to be most secure and successful. Must democracy be a sham, either because of the power of pressure groups and other established decision-makers, or because ‘the people’ are too ignorant and irrational? What, in any case, does or can representative government mean in a complex industrial society – and what does it mean to be rational in politics?

It is to these and other vital issues that this book, originally published in 1970, directs itself. In the course of their argument the authors, who feel no contradiction between their academic and their ‘radical democratic’ commitments, draw extensively upon recent empirical studies of voting, pressure groups, and of the sociological and social psychological aspects of political behaviour in Britain and the USA at the time. Problems of the nature of such evidence, the conduct of attitude surveys and opinion polls, and the relationship between modern research and the traditional themes of political theory are also analysed.

Graeme C. Moodie and Gerald Studdert-Kennedy

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