Citizens are asked to buy, and asked to consider to buy, goods of all sizes and all prices, nearly all of the time. Appeals to political decision-making are less common. In The Consumer Citizen, Ethan Porter investigates how the techniques of everyday consumer experiences can shape political behavior. Drawing on more than a dozen original studies, he shows that the casual conflation of consumer and political decisions has profound implications for how Americans think about politics. Indeed, Porter explains that consumer habits can affect citizens' attitudes about their government, their taxes, their politicians, and even whether they purchase government-sponsored health insurance. The consumer citizen approaches government as if it were just an ordinary firm. Of course, government is not an ordinary firm---far from it---and the disjunction between what government is, and the consumer apparatus that citizens bring to bear on their evaluations of it, offers insight into several long-unanswered questions in political behavior and public opinion. How do many Americans make sense of the political world? The Consumer Citizen offers a novel answer: By relying on the habits and tools that they learn as consumers.
Author(s): Ethan Porter
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2020
Language: English
Pages: 216
City: New York
Title_Pages
Dedication
Epigraph
Acknowledgments
Introduction
The_Consumer_Citizen_and_Consumer_Fairness
The_Consumer_Citizen_Politicians_and_Policy
The_Consumer_Citizen_Political_Knowledge_and_Political_Attitudes
The_Consumer_Citizen_Trust_and_Operational_Transparency
Consumers_and_Citizens
Appendix_The_Structures_of_Consumer_and_Political_Decisions
Notes
References
Index