Self-Interest vs. Symbolic Politics in Policy Attitudes and Presidential Voting

This article contrasts short-term self-interest and longstanding symbolic attitudes as determinants of (1) voters' attitudes toward government policy on four controversial issues (unemployment, national health insurance, busing, and law and order), and (2) issue voting concerning those policy a...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American political science review 1980-09, Vol.74 (3), p.670-684
Hauptverfasser: Sears, David O., Lau, Richard R., Tyler, Tom R., Allen, Harris M.
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container_title The American political science review
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creator Sears, David O.
Lau, Richard R.
Tyler, Tom R.
Allen, Harris M.
description This article contrasts short-term self-interest and longstanding symbolic attitudes as determinants of (1) voters' attitudes toward government policy on four controversial issues (unemployment, national health insurance, busing, and law and order), and (2) issue voting concerning those policy areas. In general, we found the various self-interest measures to have very little effect in determining either policy preferences or voting behavior. In contrast, symbolic attitudes (liberal or conservative ideology, party identification, and racial prejudice) had major effects. Nor did self-interest play much of a role in creating “issue publics” that were particularly attentive to, informed about, or constrained in their attitudes about these specific policy issues. Conditions that might facilitate more self-interested political attitudes, specifically having privatistic (rather than public-regarding) personal values, perceiving the policy area as a major national problem, being high in political sophistication, perceiving the government as responsive, or having a sense of political efficacy, were also explored, but had no effect. The possibility that some long-term self-interest might be reflected in either group membership or in symbolic attitudes themselves is examined. While such possibilities cannot be definitively rejected, problems with interpreting standard demographic findings as self-interest effects are discussed.
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While such possibilities cannot be definitively rejected, problems with interpreting standard demographic findings as self-interest effects are discussed.</abstract><cop>New York, USA</cop><pub>Cambridge University Press</pub><doi>10.2307/1958149</doi><tpages>15</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects ATTITUDES
Demography
Political attitudes
POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
Prejudices
PRESIDENCY (ALL NATIONS)
Presidential elections
PUBLIC OPINION
PUBLIC POLICY
School busing
Self interest
Statistical variance
SYMBOLOGY
U.S.A
Unemployment
Voter attitudes
VOTING
Voting behavior
Voting behaviour
title Self-Interest vs. Symbolic Politics in Policy Attitudes and Presidential Voting
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