ABSTRACT

The 2016 elections called into question the accuracy of public opinion polling while tapping into new streams of public opinion more widely. The third edition of this well-established text addresses these questions and adds new perspectives to its authoritative line-up. The hallmark of this book is making cutting-edge research accessible and understandable to students and general readers. Here we see a variety of disciplinary approaches to public opinion reflected including psychology, economics, sociology, and biology in addition to political science. An emphasis on race, gender, and new media puts the elections of 2016 into context and prepares students to look ahead to 2020 and beyond.

New to the third edition:

• Includes 2016 election results and their implications for public opinion polling going forward.

• Three new chapters have been added on racializing politics, worldview politics, and the modern information environment.

• New authors include Shanto Iyengar, Michael Tesler, Vladimir E. Medenica, Erin Cikanek, Danna Young, Jennifer Jerit, and Jake Haselswerdt.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction and Overview

part I|54 pages

The Meaning and Measurement of Public Opinion

chapter Chapter 1|20 pages

The Practice of Survey Research

Changes and Challenges

chapter Chapter 2|32 pages

Citizen Competence and Democratic Governance

part II|2 pages

Foundations of Political Preferences

chapter Chapter 3|24 pages

Ideology and Public Opinion

chapter Chapter 4|19 pages

Affective Polarization or Hostility Across the Party Divide

An Overview

chapter Chapter 5|19 pages

Racial Attitudes and American Politics

chapter Chapter 7|18 pages

Categorical Politics in Action

Gender and the 2016 Presidential Election

chapter Chapter 8|25 pages

Worldview Politics

chapter Chapter 10|23 pages

No Longer “Beyond our Scope”

The Biological and Non-Conscious Underpinnings of Public Opinion

part III|2 pages

The Public and Society

chapter Chapter 11|21 pages

The “Daily Them”

Hybridity, Political Polarization and Presidential Leadership in a Digital Media Age

chapter Chapter 12|15 pages

How People Learn About Politics

Navigating the Information Environment

chapter Chapter 13|18 pages

Campaigns and Elections

chapter |23 pages

Conclusion

Assessing Continuity and Change