Skip to main navigation menu Skip to main content Skip to site footer

Vol. 61 No. 4 (2017): WYMIARY POLITYCZNOŚCI

Articles and essays

What’s Happening in Politics? The Structure of Poles’ Knowledge about Politics

DOI: https://doi.org/10.35757/KiS.2017.61.4.2
Submitted: April 28, 2021
Published: October 10, 2017

Abstract

The aim of the authors is to describe the political knowledge of ordinary Poles, including the structure of their knowledge about politics and ways of thinking about it. The empirical material analyzed here comes from in-depth interviews conducted with interviewers differing by age, level of education, and degree of interest in matters connected with politics and public life. As a theoretical framework, the authors use Shawn W. Rosenberg’s concept. The authors’ analyses serve to show Poles’ process of thinking about politics; their main lines of argumentation and justification of appraisals, opinions, and views; and their most important sources of information. Due, among other things, to the growth in easy access to sources of information, it would appear above all that the ability to select information has greatly increased in importance, and the striking quality of Poles’ political knowledge is its fragmentation, ephemerality, emotionality, and low degree of systematicity.

References

  1. Bartels Larry M., 1996, Uninformed Votes: Information Effects in Presidential Elections, „American Journal of Political Science”, t. 40, nr 1, s. 194–230.
  2. Carlisle Juliet E., Patton Robert C., 2013, Is Social Media Changing How We Understand Political Engagement? An Analysis of Facebook and the 2008 Presidential Election, „Political Research Quarterly”, t. 66 (4), s. 883–895.
  3. Converse Philip E., 1964, The Nature of Belief Systems in Mass Publics, w: David E. Apter (red.), Ideology and Discontent, The Free Press, Glencoe.
  4. Cześnik Mikołaj, Wenzel Michał, 2018, Wiedza polityczna Polaków w perspektywie porównawczej, „Athenaeum. Polskie Studia Socjologiczne”, t. 57, s. 103–123.
  5. Delli Carpini Michael X., Keeter Scott, 1993, Measuring Political Knowledge: Putting First Things First, „American Journal of Political Science”, t. 37, nr 4, s. 1179–1206.
  6. Delli Carpini Michael X., Keeter Scott, 1996, What Americans Know about Politics and Why It Matters, Yale University Press, New Haven.
  7. Elff Martin, 2009, Political Knowledge in Comparative Perspective: The Problem of Cross-National Equivalence of Measurement, referat przedstawiony na MPSA 2009 Annual National Conference, 2–5 kwietnia, Chicago.
  8. French Alan, Smith Gareth, 2010, Measuring Political Brand Equity: A Consumer Oriented Approach, „European Journal of Marketing”, t. 44, nr 3/4, s. 460–477.
  9. Fishkin James S., 1997, The Voice of the People: Public Opinion and Democracy, Yale University Press, New Haven.
  10. Galston William A., 2007, Civic Knowledge, Civic Education, and Civic Engagement: A Summary of Recent Research, „International Journal of Public Administration”, t. 30, s. 625–642.
  11. Gilens Martin, 2001, Political Ignorance and Collective Policy Preferences, „The American Political Science Review”, t. 95, nr 2, s. 379–396.
  12. Kunovich Robert M., 2013, Political Knowledge in Poland, „Communist and Post-Communist Studies”, t. 46, nr 1, s. 65–78.
  13. Mondak Jeffery J., 1999, Reconsidering the Measurement of Political Knowledge, „Political Analysis”, t. 8, nr 1, s. 57–82.
  14. Neuman W. Russell, Just Marion R., Crigler Ann N., 1992, Common Knowledge: News and the Construction of Political Meaning, The University of Chicago Press, Chicago.
  15. Nielsen Sigge W., Larsen Martin V., 2014, Party Brands and Voting, „Electoral Studies”, t. 33, s. 153–65.
  16. Nowak Stefan, 1985, Metodologia badań społecznych, Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe, Warszawa.
  17. Prior Markus, 2014, Visual Political Knowledge: A Different Road to Competence?, „The Journal of Politics”, t. 76, nr 1, s. 41–57.
  18. Raciborski Jacek, 2011, Obywatelstwo w perspektywie socjologicznej, Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN, Warszawa.
  19. Reykowski Janusz, 1995, Potoczne wyobrażenia o demokracji. Psychologiczne uwarunkowania i konsekwencje, Wydawnictwo Instytutu Psychologii PAN, Warszawa.
  20. Rosenberg Shawn W., 1988, The Structure of Political Thinking, „American Journal of Political Science”, t. 32, nr 3, s. 539–566.
  21. Rosenberg Shawn, Ward Dana, Chilton Stephen, 1988, Political Reasoning and Cognition: A Piagetian View, Duke University Press, Durham.
  22. Shaker Lee, 2012, Local Political Knowledge and Assessments of Citizen Competence, „Public Opinion Quarterly”, t. 76, nr 3, s. 525–537.
  23. Tóka Gábor, Popescu Marina, 2008, Inequalities of Political Influence in New Democracies, „International Journal of Sociology”, t. 37, s. 67–93.
  24. Tworzecki Hubert, Markowski Radosław, 2011, Wiedza a stronniczość partyjna: niełatwy związek, „Studia Polityczne”, t. 28, s. 29–59.
  25. Zaller John, Feldman Stanley, 1992, A Simple Theory of the Survey Response: Answering Questions versus Revealing Preferences, „American Journal of Political Science”, t. 36, nr 3, s. 579–616.
  26. Żerkowska-Balas Marta, Cześnik Mikołaj, Zaremba Mateusz, 2017, Dynamika wiedzy politycznej Polaków, „Studia Socjologiczne”, nr 3.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Most read articles by the same author(s)

Similar Articles

<< < 27 28 29 30 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.