Citizens’ duties across generations

IF 2 3区 社会学 Q2 POLITICAL SCIENCE
A. Blais, Carol Galais, Danielle Mayer
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT There is a wide academic agreement on the existence of two different types of citizenship norms (“dutiful” and “engaged”), along with a generalized conviction about the prevalence of “engaged” norms among the young cohorts. These conclusions rely on a questionnaire battery that is omnipresent in the most important public opinion surveys and which nevertheless presents several shortcomings that might convey social desirability. We contend that the “how important” questions used to tap attitudes about what the “good citizen” should do are probably affecting conclusions about citizenship norms’ endorsement and generational change. This research puts forward an alternative battery and puts it to empirical test on a Canadian sample. Using more neutral questions aimed at tapping whether citizens construe a series of political activities as duties or else, we find that many citizens do not feel that it is their duty to participate in politics and that there is no generational divide when it comes to different conceptions of civic duties.
跨越世代的公民义务
学术界普遍认为存在两种不同类型的公民规范(“尽责”和“参与”),同时也普遍认为“参与”规范在年轻人群体中普遍存在。这些结论依赖于在最重要的民意调查中无处不在的问卷调查,尽管如此,它仍然存在一些可能传达社会期望的缺点。我们认为,用来挖掘“好公民”应该做什么的态度的“有多重要”的问题可能会影响关于公民规范的认可和代际变化的结论。本研究提出了一种替代电池,并对加拿大样本进行了实证检验。通过使用更为中立的问题来探究公民是否将一系列政治活动视为义务,我们发现许多公民并不认为参与政治是他们的义务,而且当涉及到公民义务的不同概念时,也没有代际差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
5.60%
发文量
21
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