关于美国政府监控权的公众舆论

IF 2.7 Q2 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
Nevbahar Ertas
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究考察了公众对美国政府监控的看法,重点关注三种类型的政府监控政策:公共场所的视频监控,监控电子邮件和互联网上交换的其他信息,以及未经同意收集大量人口信息。这项研究采用了多层次的方法:首先,比较了34个经合组织成员国对每项监控活动的反对意见,为讨论美国的公众舆论提供了背景。然后,分析只关注一个具有全国代表性的样本,以检验人们的态度是否会因线上和线下的政治活动、对政府的信任、对腐败的感知、对恐怖主义威胁的感知以及对安全的偏好而有所不同。虽然发现信任和感知到的腐败和威胁在所有领域都具有一致和显著的影响,但政治活动的影响因监视权的领域以及政治活动的类型而异。值得注意的是,只有在线政治活动是反对政府监控互联网交流权利的重要预测因素,而在线和离线政治活动都有助于反对大规模信息收集。讨论了研究和政策的实践和理论意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Public Opinions Regarding Government Surveillance Rights in the United States

This study examines public opinion regarding government surveillance in the United States, focusing on three types of government surveillance policy: video surveillance in public areas, monitoring of emails and other information exchanged on the Internet, and mass information collection on the population without consent. The study employs a multilevel approach: First, opposition to each surveillance activity is compared among 34 OECD member countries to provide context for discussing public opinion in the United States. Then the analysis focuses solely on a nationally representative sample to examine whether attitudes vary by online and offline political activism, trust in government, perceived corruption, perceived terrorism threat, and a preference for security over freedom. While trust and perceived corruption and threat are found to have consistent and significant effects in all domains, the influence of political activity varied by domain of surveillance rights, as well as type of political activity. Notably, only online political activity was a significant predictor of opposition to the government's right to monitor exchanges on the Internet, while both online and offline political activity contributed to the disapproval of mass information collection. Practical and theoretical implications for research and policy are discussed.

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来源期刊
Journal of Public Affairs
Journal of Public Affairs PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION-
CiteScore
7.10
自引率
3.80%
发文量
41
期刊介绍: The Journal of Public Affairs provides an international forum for refereed papers, case studies and reviews on the latest developments, practice and thinking in government relations, public affairs, and political marketing. The Journal is guided by the twin objectives of publishing submissions of the utmost relevance to the day-to-day practice of communication specialists, and promoting the highest standards of intellectual rigour.
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