Too Much Knowledge, Too Little Power: An Assessment of Political Knowledge in Highly Policed Communities
Studies regularly conclude that ordinary Americans lack the knowledge they need to form meaningful political preferences, leading to inefficient or counterproductive policy making. Our study of conversations about policing among black residents of highly policed neighborhoods challenges this prevail...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of politics 2019-07, Vol.81 (3), p.1153-1166 |
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creator | Weaver, Vesla Prowse, Gwen Piston, Spencer |
description | Studies regularly conclude that ordinary Americans lack the knowledge they need to form meaningful political preferences, leading to inefficient or counterproductive policy making. Our study of conversations about policing among black residents of highly policed neighborhoods challenges this prevailing account. We find that people possess dual, contradictory knowledge about how the state should operate based on written law and how it actually operates as a lived experience; that their knowledge is attained through involuntary encounters with the state rather than through civics education; and that this knowledge, rather than functioning to improve preferences to be communicated to an elected official, serves to help individuals distance themselves from the antidemocratic face of the state. Our findings point to a rethinking of political knowledge and its role in contemporary American democracy. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1086/703538 |
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Our study of conversations about policing among black residents of highly policed neighborhoods challenges this prevailing account. We find that people possess dual, contradictory knowledge about how the state should operate based on written law and how it actually operates as a lived experience; that their knowledge is attained through involuntary encounters with the state rather than through civics education; and that this knowledge, rather than functioning to improve preferences to be communicated to an elected official, serves to help individuals distance themselves from the antidemocratic face of the state. 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subjects | Criminal justice Democracy Involuntary Knowledge Neighborhoods Policy making Political power Power Public officials Public opinion RACE AND LAW ENFORCEMENT SYMPOSIUM Residents |
title | Too Much Knowledge, Too Little Power: An Assessment of Political Knowledge in Highly Policed Communities |
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