From Allegiant to Assertive Citizens

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenKapitelbegutachtet

Standard

From Allegiant to Assertive Citizens. / Welzel, Christian; Dalton, Russell.

The Civic Culture Transformed: From Allegiant to Assertive Citizens. Hrsg. / Russell Dalton; Welzel Christian. 1. Aufl. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2014. S. 282-306.

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenKapitelbegutachtet

Harvard

Welzel, C & Dalton, R 2014, From Allegiant to Assertive Citizens. in R Dalton & W Christian (Hrsg.), The Civic Culture Transformed: From Allegiant to Assertive Citizens. 1 Aufl., Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, S. 282-306. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139600002.017

APA

Welzel, C., & Dalton, R. (2014). From Allegiant to Assertive Citizens. in R. Dalton, & W. Christian (Hrsg.), The Civic Culture Transformed: From Allegiant to Assertive Citizens (1 Aufl., S. 282-306). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139600002.017

Vancouver

Welzel C, Dalton R. From Allegiant to Assertive Citizens. in Dalton R, Christian W, Hrsg., The Civic Culture Transformed: From Allegiant to Assertive Citizens. 1 Aufl. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2014. S. 282-306 doi: 10.1017/CBO9781139600002.017

Bibtex

@inbook{d0a80af140bf437fb112cfa2168e8f9a,
title = "From Allegiant to Assertive Citizens",
abstract = "Still today, The Civic Culture by Gabriel Almond and Sidney Verba counts as one of the most influential studies in comparative politics. The opus was pathbreaking because it formalized a model to describe the political culture of a nation and applied this model cross-nationally in five countries. As Sidney Verba (2011) has recently suggested, The Civic Culture{\textquoteright}s most important legacy has been planting the seed of political culture research for the following half-century.The evolving literature on political culture has shown how citizen values can change over time, as Almond and Verba (1980) demonstrated in The Civic Culture Revisited. Indeed, their second study provided some of the first insights into the social dynamics that affect postindustrial democracies and transform their political cultures.More recently, public opinion research has expanded beyond a small number of established democracies to a true global scale. Before that expansion, attempts to identify the political culture in the developing world were based on the impressionistic insights of expert observers. Although rich in their descriptions of local traditions, these experts could only observe what was observable; they could not provide voice to what people were thinking in autocratic states. Congruence theory suggested that autocracies were supported by a noncivic political culture in which the populace accepted or even embraced rule by monarchs, dictators, or military governments. But to what extent this assumption was true could not be tested in the absence of systematic evidence. Today, this situation has changed significantly: The World Values Survey (WVS), the Global Barometer Surveys and other cross-national survey projects provide plenty of public opinion data that can help answering the question of regime legitimacy in different parts of the world.",
keywords = "Politics, Political culture, political change, Gender and Diversity",
author = "Christian Welzel and Russell Dalton",
year = "2014",
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language = "English",
isbn = "978-1-107-03926-1",
pages = "282--306",
editor = "Russell Dalton and Welzel Christian",
booktitle = "The Civic Culture Transformed",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
address = "United Kingdom",
edition = "1",

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RIS

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T1 - From Allegiant to Assertive Citizens

AU - Welzel, Christian

AU - Dalton, Russell

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N2 - Still today, The Civic Culture by Gabriel Almond and Sidney Verba counts as one of the most influential studies in comparative politics. The opus was pathbreaking because it formalized a model to describe the political culture of a nation and applied this model cross-nationally in five countries. As Sidney Verba (2011) has recently suggested, The Civic Culture’s most important legacy has been planting the seed of political culture research for the following half-century.The evolving literature on political culture has shown how citizen values can change over time, as Almond and Verba (1980) demonstrated in The Civic Culture Revisited. Indeed, their second study provided some of the first insights into the social dynamics that affect postindustrial democracies and transform their political cultures.More recently, public opinion research has expanded beyond a small number of established democracies to a true global scale. Before that expansion, attempts to identify the political culture in the developing world were based on the impressionistic insights of expert observers. Although rich in their descriptions of local traditions, these experts could only observe what was observable; they could not provide voice to what people were thinking in autocratic states. Congruence theory suggested that autocracies were supported by a noncivic political culture in which the populace accepted or even embraced rule by monarchs, dictators, or military governments. But to what extent this assumption was true could not be tested in the absence of systematic evidence. Today, this situation has changed significantly: The World Values Survey (WVS), the Global Barometer Surveys and other cross-national survey projects provide plenty of public opinion data that can help answering the question of regime legitimacy in different parts of the world.

AB - Still today, The Civic Culture by Gabriel Almond and Sidney Verba counts as one of the most influential studies in comparative politics. The opus was pathbreaking because it formalized a model to describe the political culture of a nation and applied this model cross-nationally in five countries. As Sidney Verba (2011) has recently suggested, The Civic Culture’s most important legacy has been planting the seed of political culture research for the following half-century.The evolving literature on political culture has shown how citizen values can change over time, as Almond and Verba (1980) demonstrated in The Civic Culture Revisited. Indeed, their second study provided some of the first insights into the social dynamics that affect postindustrial democracies and transform their political cultures.More recently, public opinion research has expanded beyond a small number of established democracies to a true global scale. Before that expansion, attempts to identify the political culture in the developing world were based on the impressionistic insights of expert observers. Although rich in their descriptions of local traditions, these experts could only observe what was observable; they could not provide voice to what people were thinking in autocratic states. Congruence theory suggested that autocracies were supported by a noncivic political culture in which the populace accepted or even embraced rule by monarchs, dictators, or military governments. But to what extent this assumption was true could not be tested in the absence of systematic evidence. Today, this situation has changed significantly: The World Values Survey (WVS), the Global Barometer Surveys and other cross-national survey projects provide plenty of public opinion data that can help answering the question of regime legitimacy in different parts of the world.

KW - Politics

KW - Political culture

KW - political change

KW - Gender and Diversity

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U2 - 10.1017/CBO9781139600002.017

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M3 - Chapter

SN - 978-1-107-03926-1

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BT - The Civic Culture Transformed

A2 - Dalton, Russell

A2 - Christian, Welzel

PB - Cambridge University Press

CY - Cambridge

ER -

DOI