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Archive | 1998

The impact of values

Jan W. van Deth; Elinor Scarbrough

Declining religiosity, waning class values, rising postmaterialism, along with Green values, postmodernism, and feminism, are indicative of profound and widespread change in the values of citizens. This volume tracks these changes and analyses their impact on political efficiancy, interest, activity, trust, voting, and involvement in new social movements. Series Description This set of five volumes is an exhaustive study of beliefs in government in post-war Europe. Based upon an extensive collection of survey evidence, the results challenge widely argued theories of mass opinion, and much scholarly writing about citizen attitudes towards government and politics. The series arises from a research project sponsored by the European Science Foundation. Series ISBN: 0-19-961880-1 This book is intended for scholars and students of comparative and European politics, public opinion; journalists working in the same areas; civil servants.


International Journal of Social Research Methodology | 2003

Measuring Social Capital : Orthodoxies and Continuing Controversies

Jan W. van Deth

Studying social capital is widely spread and the concept entered almost each and every field of the social sciences in the last decade. An overview of the available research strategies and empirical approaches of social capital is presented here. Surprisingly, the conceptual heterogenuity is much less reflected in operational and empirical heterogenuity than expected. The field is characterized by several orthodoxies, mainly related to the dominant position of polling methods and the use of straightforward survey questions. Available alternative approaches are limited to the use of official statistics as inverse indicators and to some experiments. The major pitfalls in empirical research on social capital are discussed. Urgently needed are multi-method and multi-level strategies in order to strengthen the role of empirical evidence in the debates on social capital, civil society, and citizenship.Studying social capital is widely spread and the concept entered almost each and every field of the social sciences in the last decade. An overview of the available research strategies and empirical approaches of social capital is presented here. Surprisingly, the conceptual heterogenuity is much less reflected in operational and empirical heterogenuity than expected. The field is characterized by several orthodoxies, mainly related to the dominant position of polling methods and the use of straightforward survey questions. Available alternative approaches are limited to the use of official statistics as inverse indicators and to some experiments. The major pitfalls in empirical research on social capital are discussed. Urgently needed are multi-method and multi-level strategies in order to strengthen the role of empirical evidence in the debates on social capital, civil society, and citizenship.


Archive | 1990

Continuities in political action : a longitudinal study of political orientations in three western democracies

M. Kent Jennings; Jan W. van Deth; Samuel H. Barnes; Dieter Fuchs; Felix J. Heunks; Ronald Inglehart; Max Kaase; Hans-Dieter Klingemann; Jacques J.A. Thomassen

Where you can find the continuities in political action longitudinal study of political orientations in three western democracies de gruyter studies on north america s easily? Is it in the book store? On-line book store? are you sure? Keep in mind that you will find the book in this site. This book is very referred for you because it gives not only the experience but also lesson. The lessons are very valuable to serve for you, thats not about who are reading this continuities in political action longitudinal study of political orientations in three western democracies de gruyter studies on north america s book. It is about this book that will give wellness for all people from many societies.


Information, Communication & Society | 2015

Using Twitter to mobilize protest action: online mobilization patterns and action repertoires in the Occupy Wall Street, Indignados, and Aganaktismenoi movements

Yannis Theocharis; Will Lowe; Jan W. van Deth; Gema García-Albacete

The extensive use of social media for protest purposes was a distinctive feature of the recent protest events in Spain, Greece, and the United States. Like the Occupy Wall Street protesters in the United States, the indignant activists of Spain and Greece protested against unjust, unequal, and corrupt political and economic institutions marked by the arrogance of those in power. Social media can potentially change or contribute to the political communication, mobilization, and organization of social movements. To what extent did these three movements use social media in such ways? To answer this question a comparative content analysis of tweets sent during the heydays of each of the campaigns is conducted. The results indicate that, although Twitter was used significantly for political discussion and to communicate protest information, calls for participation were not predominant. Only a very small minority of tweets referred to protest organization and coordination issues. Furthermore, comparing the actual content of the Twitter information exchanges reveals similarities as well as differences among the three movements, which can be explained by the different national contexts.


European Journal of Political Research | 2000

Interesting but irrelevant: Social capital and the saliency of politics in Western Europe

Jan W. van Deth

Many explanations of political involvement are based on the idea that higherlevels of resources will be matched by higher levels of political involvement. Yet these kind of interpretations seem to overlook the fact that resources potentially increase individual autonomy and widen the scope of alternative actions, and so facilitate a decrease of political involvement. The analyses presented here are based on the rather paradoxical expectation that we will find a higher level of subjective political interest and, simultaneously, a lower level of political saliency among people commanding relatively high levels of social capital or other resources. The empirical evidence available for Western European countries in 1990 and 1998 essentially confirms the notion of diverging consequences of social capital (and other resources) for political involvement. People combining high political interest with a low saliency of politics are labelled spectators here. For them politics has lost its obligatory character – it is interesting and probably important to follow what goes on in this area, but compared with other matters its relevance is relatively low. Besides, a strong gender bias still can be found for each and every aspect of political involvement.


Acta Politica | 2014

A conceptual map of political participation

Jan W. van Deth

How would you recognize a mode of participation if you see one? Owing to the rapid expansion of political activities in the last decades this question has become increasingly difficult to answer. Neither the development of all-embracing nominal definitions, nor deductive analyses of existing modes of participation seem to be helpful. In addition, the spread of expressive modes of participation makes it hard to avoid purely subjective definitions. The aim of this discussion paper is to develop an operational definition of political participation, which allows us to cover distinct conceptualizations systematically, efficiently and consistently. This goal can only be arrived at if the conventional approach of presenting nominal definitions to solve conceptual problems is left behind. Instead, available definitions are included in a set of decision rules to distinguish three main variants of political participation. A fourth variant is distinguished for non-political activities used for political purposes. Together, the four variants of political participation cover the whole range of political participation systematically without excluding any mode of political participation unknown yet. At the same time, the endless expansion of the modes of political participation in modern democracies does not result in an endless conceptual expansion. Implications for research and various examples are discussed.


Archive | 1997

Private groups and public life : social participation, voluntary associations and political involvement in representative democracies

Jan W. van Deth

1. Introduction 2. Voluntary Associations and Democratic Politics: Participation in Britain 3. Social Reflexivity, Democracy, and New Types of Democracy in Denmark 4. Political Parties and Social Organisation in Flanders 5. Women and the Transformation of the Norwegian Voluntary Sector 6. The Rise of Protest Businesses in Britain 7. Political Capital Formation among British Party Members 8. The Corporatist Channel and Civil Society in the Netherlands 9. Associative and Political Participation in Switzerland and France 10. The Political Participation of Intermediary organisations at the Local Level 11. Organising Capacity of Societies and Modernity 12. Voluntary Associations, Social Movements, and Individual Political Behaviour in Western Europe. References, Subject Index, Name Index


Archive | 2004

Deutschland in Europa

Jan W. van Deth

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American Behavioral Scientist | 2010

Introduction: Civicness, Equality, and Democracy—A “Dark Side” of Social Capital?

Jan W. van Deth; Sonja Zmerli

Debates about social capital usually focus on its presumed positive consequences. Although this expectation has been corroborated empirically, in many instances some less benign consequences of social capital have also been uncovered. Several explanations for the emergence and consequences of these “dark sides” of social capital are briefly presented here and, subsequently, put to empirical testing. The contributors to this issue of American Behavioral Scientist have a common understanding of these dark sides of social capital. Conceptualizing them as negative consequences or outcomes, the authors use various research strategies to scrutinize the nature of the effects of social capital in various situations. In each analysis, however, particular focus is placed on the importance of the contextual setting. Special attention is paid to the degree of democratization, the postcommunist legacy, different welfare state regimes, the saliency of political cleavages, and types and interconnectedness of voluntary associations. The findings suggest that the specific consequences of social capital largely depend on political and social conditions.


Political Studies | 2014

Supporting Democracy: Political Participation and Political Attitudes. Exploring Causality Using Panel Data

Ellen Quintelier; Jan W. van Deth

The relationship between political participation and political attitudes is at the heart of any discussion about fostering democratic engagement. However, many authors simply presume that political attitudes reinforce political behaviour. Using a three-wave panel data set with more than 3,000 adolescents, we show that political attitudes do not necessarily precede behaviour. On the contrary, focusing on the relationships between five political attitudes and two variants of political participation, our findings indicate that it is much more likely that political participation strengthens political attitudes than that attitudes trigger participation. This does not mean that attitudes are irrelevant for behaviour, but the reverse impact is much stronger. More specifically, we find that the effects of being politically engaged on political interest, efficacy, confidence and norms of citizenship are clearly stronger than the effects of these attitudes on participation.

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Kenneth Newton

University of Southampton

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Anders Westholm

Mannheim Centre for European Social Research

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José Ramón Montero

Autonomous University of Madrid

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