Political disagreement : the survival of diverse opinions within communication networks / Robert Huckfeldt, Paul E. Johnson, John Sprague.
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780511211836
- 051121183X
- 9780521834308
- 0521834309
- 9780521542234
- 0521542235
- 051121541X
- 9780511215414
- 051121720X
- 9780511217203
- 9780511617102
- 0511617100
- 1107161037
- 9781107161030
- 0511315813
- 9780511315817
- 0511213603
- 9780511213601
- Communication in politics
- Political participation
- Consensus (Social sciences)
- Public opinion
- Democracy
- Communication politique
- Participation politique
- Consensus (Sciences sociales)
- Opinion publique
- Démocratie
- democracy
- PHILOSOPHY -- Political
- Communication in politics
- Consensus (Social sciences)
- Democracy
- Political participation
- Public opinion
- Politieke communicatie
- Publieke opinie
- Consensus
- Politieke conflicten
- 320/.01/4 22
- JA85 .H83 2004eb
- 89.56
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus | E-Books EBSCO | Available |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 235-245) and index.
Print version record.
1. Communication, influence, and the capacity of citizens to disagree -- 2. New information, old information, and persistent disagreement -- 3. Dyads, networks, and autoregressive influence -- 4. Disagreement, heterogeneity, and the effectiveness of political communication -- 5. Disagreement, heterogeneity, and persuasion : how does disagreement survive? -- 6. Agent-based explanations, patterns of communication, and the inevitability of homogeneity -- 7. Agent-based explanations, autoregressive influence, and the survival of disagreement -- 8. Heterogeneous networks and citizen capacity : disagreement, ambivalence, and engagement -- 9. Summary, implications, and conclusion -- App. A. The Indianapolis -- St. Louis study.
Political disagreement is widespread within the communication network of ordinary citizens. The authors demonstrate the ubiquity of such disagreement & show that communication & influence within dyads is autoregressive & that this serves to sustain disagreement within patterns of social interaction.
English.
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