This book presents a comprehensive examination of public opinion in the democratic world.
Built around chapters that highlight key explanatory frameworks used in understanding public opinion, the book presents a coherent study of the subject in a comparative perspective, emphasizing and interrogating immigration as a key issue of high concern to most mass publics in the democratic world.
Key features of the book include
Covers several theoretical issues and determinants of opinion such as the effects of personality, age and life cycle, ideology, social class, partisanship, gender, religion, ethnicity, language, and media, highlighting over time the effects of political, social, and economic contexts.
Each chapter explores the theoretical rationale, mechanisms of effect, and use in the scholarly literature on public opinion before applying these to the issue of immigration comparatively and in specific places or regions.
Widely comparative using a nine-country sample (Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Portugal, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America) in the analysis of individual-level determinants of public opinion about immigration and extending to other countries like Belgium, Brazil, and Japan when evaluating contextual factors.
This edited volume will be essential reading for students, scholars, and practitioners interested in public opinion, political behaviour, voting behaviour, politics of the media, immigration, political communication, and, more generally, democracy and comparative politics.
Author(s): Cameron D. Anderson, Mathieu Turgeon
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 385
City: London
Cover
Endorsement Page
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of figures
List of tables
List of contributors
Acknowledgements
Part 1 Public opinion in a comparative perspective
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Defining and measuring public opinion
Part 2 The individual-level determinants of public opinion
Chapter 3 Public opinion about immigration and immigrants
Chapter 4 Age and public opinion
Chapter 5 Gender and public opinion
Chapter 6 Immigration status and public opinion
Chapter 7 Class and public opinion
Chapter 8 Religion and public opinion
Chapter 9 Personality and public opinion
Chapter 10 Ideology and public opinion
Chapter 11 Partisanship and public opinion
Part 3 Context and complexity in determinants of public opinion
Chapter 12 Immigration and public opinion in Brazil: Taking stock of new waves of migration and polarization
Chapter 13 The inflow of immigrants and natives’ attitudes towards immigration in Japan
Chapter 14 The impact of labour market vulnerability: Explaining attitudes towards immigration in Europe
Chapter 15 Linguistic cleavages in public opinion
Chapter 16 The news media organizations and public opinion on political issues
Chapter 17 Racial attitudes and opposition to immigration
Chapter 18 Conclusion
Index