STILL BOWLING ALONE? THE POST-9/11 SPLIT

On college campuses nationwide, this civic-engagement "youth movement" has evoked the spirit of the early John F. Kennedy years.\n19 Among other things, this means that the overall rise in youth political engagement and volunteering since 9/11 masks a pair of subtrends that are headed in d...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of democracy 2010-01, Vol.21 (1), p.9-16
Hauptverfasser: Sander, Thomas H, Putnam, Robert D
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description On college campuses nationwide, this civic-engagement "youth movement" has evoked the spirit of the early John F. Kennedy years.\n19 Among other things, this means that the overall rise in youth political engagement and volunteering since 9/11 masks a pair of subtrends that are headed in different directions, with lower-class youth growing less involved while better-off youngsters become more involved. Since public discussion in the United States often tends to conflate class and race, it is important to emphasize that this growing gap among different groups of young people is about the former and not just the latter.
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source EBSCOhost Political Science Complete; Project Muse Premium Collection; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; HeinOnline Law Journal Library
subjects Adults
Citizen participation
Civil society
Class
Colleges & universities
Community participation
Endangered & extinct species
Generation X
Political behaviour
Political culture
Political Participation
Politics
September 11
September 11th 2001
Social Capital
Social networks
Social participation
Teaching
Television networks
Trends
U.S.A
United States of America
Young adults
title STILL BOWLING ALONE? THE POST-9/11 SPLIT
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