Have the American people grown more politically sophisticated in the past three decades, or do they remain relatively ignorant of the political world? Did a "great leap forward" take place during the 1960s in which our citizenry became involved and adept voters? In this important book, Eric Smith addresses these and other provocative questions that have long befuddled political scientists and policymakers. Much of the current wisdom about American voters derives from an argument advanced in a volume entitled The Changing American Voter, written by Nie, Verba, and Petrocik. In this work, the authors contend that the electorate made a "great leap forward" in political sophistication and ideological thinking between the 1960 and 1964 elections. They argue that people changed in response to a shifting environment, and that, in particular, the surge of protest and ideological rhetoric between 1960 and 1964 engendered a new political savvy and sophistication. In their view, people learned to understand politics better, to relate the issues to the candidates more accurately, and to cast more informed, intelligent votes. In The Unchanging American Voter, Smith takes issue with this portrait of an engaged American citizenry and replaces it with a quite different picture of the voters of this nation. He posits a more bleak political landscape in which the typical voter knows little about politics, is not interested in the political arena and consequently does not participate in it, and is even unable to organize his or her attitudes in a coherent manner. To support this view, Smith demonstrates how the indices by which Nie, Verba, and Petrocik measured levels of sophistication during the 1960s were methodologically flawed and how a closer examination of supposed changes reveals only superficial and unimportant shifts in the ways voters have approached the ballot box since the 1950s. The Unchanging American Voter is an intelligent and original work that provides a new perspective of the American citizenry. It is sure to engender discussion and debate about the dynamics of voting in postwar America.
Dynamics of Democracy, 6e, offers a comprehensive introductory survey for students of American government.
In Ray's account, the emergent story of U.S. civil society is that of a dynamic institution, not necessarily one that is linear in its progression.
Smith, Eric R.A.N. 1989. The Unchanging American Voter. Berkeley: University of California Press. Smulovitz, Catalina, and Enrique Peruzzotti. 2000. “Societal Accountability in Latin America.” Journal of Democracy 11(4):147–58.
Keith, Bruce E., David B. Magleby, Candice J. Nelson, Elizabeth Orr, Mark C. Westlye, and Raymond E. Wolfinger. 1992. The Myth of the Independent Voter. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. Kelley, Stanley, Jr. 1983 ...
“A Dynamic Simultaneous Equation Model of Electoral Choice.” American Political Science Review 73: 1055–70. Mayer, W. G. 1996. ... New York: Random House. Smith, E. R. 1989. The Unchanging American Voter.
H. R. Haldeman, President Nixon's former chief of staff, is said to have boasted: "Every president needs a son of a bitch, and I'm Nixon's. I'm his buffer and I'm...
of that information has been gathered by the authors of The American Voter (campbell et al., 1960) and by their ... The Changing American Voter (nie et al., 1976), The Unchanging American Voter (smith, 1989), and The New American Voter ...
J. MacKenzie, The Appearance of Justice 191 (1974). Even today, although a majority of States have adopted either the announce clause or its 1990 ABA successor, adoption is not unanimous. Of the 31 States that select some or all of ...
3–18; Page, B., & Jones, C., “Reciprocal Effects of Party Preferences, Party Loyalties, and the Vote,” 1979, American Political Science Review, pp. 1071–89; Smith, E. R. A. N., The Unchanging American Voter, University of California ...
Institute of Technology, 1989), and Graham, “Public Opinion and U.S. Foreign Policy Decision Making.” 44. ... From Tea Leaves to Opinion Polls: A Theory of Democratic Leadership (New York: Columbia University Press, 1996). 51.