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Government and Politics of the USA Lecture 5: US Political Culture Dr Simon Boucher ~ [email protected] Readings for today Required reading… • McKay chap 2 • Singh chap 2 Additional resources… • Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America • Louis Hartz, The Liberal Tradition in America • Roger Smith, “Beyond Tocqueville, Myrdal and Hartz: The Multiple Traditions in America”. APSR 87.3, Sept 1993 • John Kenneth Galbraith, The Culture of Contentment • Robert Putnam, Bowling Alone Plus see the course website… • http://uspoliticstcd.pbwiki.com/FrontPage Agenda • What is political culture? • Basic values of US political culture • Additional influences on US political culture • “American exceptionalism” What is “political culture”? "The orientation of the citizens of a nation toward politics, their perceptions of political legitimacy and the traditions of political practice." Beliefs and values about how… • Government …Life should be carried out • Political and within a state • Economic… How is political culture formed? Often independent of political authority • Formed by socialisation – Parents – Work - Friends - Media - School - Religion • What happens when political culture greatly diverges from political institutions? – Regime change – Country fragments Basics of US Political Culture In the US, the political culture typically supports and reinforces the political system: “It has been our fate as a nation not to have ideologies, but to be one” (Richard Hofstadter) • Most commentators agree the foundations of US political culture – – – – – Liberty Equality Individualism Democracy The rule of law under the Constitution Basics of US Political Culture In the US, the political culture typically supports and reinforces the political system: “It has been our fate as a nation not to have ideologies, but to be one” (Richard Hofstadter) Most commentators agree the foundations of US political culture… Democracy Liberty Rule of law Equality Individualism Liberty • Tends to be felt stronger by elites • Tends to be more general than specific • Has clearly increased in last 50 years • Liberal attitudes stronger in certain regions • Antipathy remains to certain non-American values – Islam – Big brother-state Equality Americans have… • Equality of estimation • Equality of opportunity • Equality before the law But… • Dialogue of equality masks considerable de facto economic inequality Individualism “Americanism” characterised by stress on individual rather than collective action… • • • • “Self-reliant roots in Puritanism Collectivist political parties absent Trade union membership low Public antipathy to welfare dependence • Reinforced by the success of capitalism But economic individualism doesn’t automatically imply cultural individualism Democracy and the rule of law • Americans devoted to majoritarianism • Election legitimacy usually accepted • Belief in Constitution and the rule of law • General admiration for the US system; system remains relatively stable • Differences over the system accommodated without challenging order The concept of “Americanism” Americans’ distinctive views on… • • • • • Liberty Equality Individualism Democracy The rule of law under the Constitution Collectively form a political culture known as “Americanism”. • Devotion to Americanism is striking • Ideological consensus on key points supported by virtually all social and political groups Other influences upon US political culture • • • • Immigration Social structure Race and ethnicity Religion Immigration America is built on an “ideology of immigration” …Population has grown • 20% per decade until 1920 • 10% per decade since 1920 • 12 million immigrants in 1990s HOWEVER • Frequently caps and restrictions placed on immigrants over US history • Immigration has become increasingly controversial due to illegal immigration • Bush’s attempted to address it failed spectacularly Home of the middle class? • Traditionally America has been essentially middle class, eschewing both working class and aristocratic values • 2002: 45% of American workers in professional, technical, managerial or administrative jobs • Highly educated society • High level of home and stock ownership HOWEVER • US history NOT free from class conflict • Distribution of American wealth and income highly unequal • Some groups in society actually getting poorer Race and ethnicity • US has a highly diverse ethnic composition • African, Hispanic and Asian groups remain particularly distinctive • Race issues clearly important, but almost always with context of established institutions and political parties Religion • America is a highly religious country • Multiplicity of religions • Traditionally, religion not a source of major social division • Christian right has est. considerable political influence in last 20 years • Faith-related issues increasingly controversial • “War on terror” a “war on Islam”? HOWEVER • Political success of religious right mixed • Influence over-exaggerated? Components of US political culture Immigration Liberty Equality Individualism The American Dream Democracy Religion Social structure Race American Exceptionalism? American “Exceptionalism” A prevailing assumption that the US is unique… • • • • • Historical evolution Ethnic diversity Absence of class politics Based upon ideals, not ethnicity Sophistication of Constitutional system … And superior? • • • • “Manifest destiny” Social mobility Economic and military power Moral superiority- above international law …As long as Americans believe it, it doesn’t matter whether it is true or not The coming weeks 4-5pm this week: Dr Bill McSweeney • Read class material – 2 journalistic articles; 10 pages – Prepare questions • Come ready to participate Weeks 4 & 5: No lectures, essay titles announced Week 6: lectures AND tutorials • Federalism • The Republican Presidential candidates Tutorial groups reminder • 2 tutorial groups: – Group A on Tuesdays @ 4pm in 3020 – Group B on Thursdays @ 11am in 4046 • Sign up to a tutorial group by emailing Jane ([email protected]) • Places on first-come, first served basis • Once you sign up to a group please stick to it • Two Michaelmas term tutorials in weeks 6 and 8