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兩岸政治參與 高永光老師 上課使用 Classroom Only Contacting Officials • Contacting an official is very specific as to situation and time; a person contacts a governmental official out of concern about a given narrow issue that affects him or her directly--school taxes, road work, social security check, and so forth. 上課使用 Classroom Only • Only a small fraction of the American citizenry (about 6%) fall into this category, but the percentage was considerably higher in some of the other countries studied; the Netherlands showed the highest at 38%. 上課使用 Classroom Only Protestors • Protesting tends to be engaged in more frequently by persons in minority status such as blacks, students, and women. Among American blacks, for example, there is a positive correlation between protesting and being patriotic. 上課使用 Classroom Only Communicators • “Keep informed about politics," "send messages of support to political leaders when they are doing well," "send protest messages to political leaders when they are doing badly," "engage in political dis c us s i on . " " infor m others i n my community about politics." "make my views known to public officials," "write letters to the editors of newspapers." 上課使用 Classroom Only • A communicative mode of relationship between the individual and the polity seems to require a high education, a high level of information about politics, and a high level of interest in politics. The modes of relationship between individuals and the polity are summarized in Figure 1. The modes or styles for making inputs to the political system are somewhat related to the beliefs that people hold about what the government should do for them. 上課使用 Classroom Only • Figure 2 shows a sketch combining the general dimension of political involvement with the several modes of activity. Activists are of different types: communicators community activists, party and campaign workers, and protestors. 上課使用 Classroom Only INP’’TS MODES ACTIVE U N C O N V E N TI O N A L C O N V E N T I O N A L PROTESTORS OUTTAKE POSTURE DEFINING ITEMS Join in public street demonstrations (3%) Riot it necessary (2%) Protest vigorously if government does something morally wrong (26%) Attend protest meetings (6%) Refuse to obey unjust laws (16%) (They are also active on other modes.) Demand very active government; particularly protect civil rights and provide economic opportunities COMMUNITY ACTIVITS Work with others on local problems (30%) Form a group to work on local problems (14%) Active membership in community organizations (8%) Contact officials on social issues (14%) (They also vote fairly regularly.) Use Voluntary community activity rather than government to provide welfare No particular outtake posture PARTY AND CAMPAIGN WORKERS Actively work for party or candidate (26%) Persuade others how to vote (28%) Attend meetings, rallies (19%) Give money to party or candidate (13%) Join and support political party (35%) Be a candidate for office (3%) (They also vote regularly.) 上課使用 Classroom Only INP’’TS Keep informed about politics (67%) Engage in political discussion (42%) Write letters to newspaper editors (9%) Send support or protest messages to political leaders (15%) (They also vote fairly regularly.) Observe, discuss, and criticize governmental performance; watching posture CONTACT SPECILISTS Contact local, state, and national officials on particularized problems (4%) (They are inactive otherwise.) Seek special response to personal needs rather than general social conditions PASSIVE SUPPORTIVE VOTERS AND PATRIOTS Vote regularly in elections (63%) Love my country (94%) Show patriotism by flying the flag, attending parades, etc. (70%) Pay all taxes (94%) Conventional Limited Government Provide public order, security, leadership, justice APATHETIC INACTIVE No voting, no other activity (22%) No patriotic inputs (3.5%) ACTIVE C O N V E N T I O N A L OUTTAKE POSTURE COMMUNICATORS Figure1: Modes relating individuals to the policy. Percentages for the party and campaign workers mode are based mostly on a national survey conducted in 1967 (Verba & Nie, 1972); percentages for the remaining modes are based on 上課使用 the Buffalo Survey (1968). Classroom Only 上課使用 Classroom Only Factors Antecedent to Behavior • Every decision to act, or not to act, is affected by a person's immediate environment, particularly the stimuli that are present in that environment. The decision to participate or not is also directly affected by the attitudes, beliefs, and personality trails of citizens. These life position factors are generally identified and measured by such familiar variables as education, income, age, race, and so forth. 上課使用 Classroom Only Political Participation as a Function of Stimuli • The more stimuli about politics a person receives, the greater the likelihood that he or she will participate in politics and the greater the depth of that participation. A related proposition is that persons with strong preferences for a party or candidate pick up more political stimuli than those with weak preferences. 上課使用 Classroom Only Political participation as a Function of Personal Factors • Three personal factors have been related by research to political participation; attitudes, beliefs, and personality traits. 上課使用 Classroom Only Participation as a Function of Attitudes and Beliefs • One's belief system is generally larger than one's value system. • Beliefs, and the cognitions which underlie both beliefs and attitudes, have not been widely researched in political-behavior studies. 上課使用 Classroom Only Psychological Involvement • Psychological involvement refers to the degree to which citizens are interested in and concerned about politics and public affairs. 上課使用 Classroom Only Sense of Civic Obligation • A sense of obligation to participate in politics is another important political attitude that relates to participation. Feeling a duty to participate carries over strongly to political actions; several studies show that persons feeling a duty to participate in politics are more likely to do so. 上課使用 Classroom Only Party Identification • Much research has shown that the strength of party identification is important for explaining levels of political activity. • Party identification represents a long-term force in contrast to candidate and issue preferences, which are short-term forces (Campbell el al., 1960). 上課使用 Classroom Only Group Identification • Identification with a group is similar to party identification. Group identification is a sense of belonging, together with an awareness of the salience of the group. 上課使用 Classroom Only Political Efficacy Feelings • Political efficacy is the feeling that one is capable of influencing the public decisionmaking process. A person who believes that he or she can influence government officials or public issues is said to be subjectively efficacious or competent. 上課使用 Classroom Only Alienation, Cynicism, Distrust • It is not easy to define alienation; the difficulty stems from the fact that it is an extremely fashionable concept loosely used to refer to all sorts of negative attitudes about society in general and the political system in particular. Political alienation will be defined here as deep seated and relatively enduring feelings of estrangement, rejection, negativism, and unhappiness with the political system. 上課使用 Classroom Only Participation as a Function of Personality • The impact of personality on political participation is often more latent than manifest; it can come forth strongly in some situations and have almost no influence in others 上課使用 Classroom Only Sociability and Extraversion • ociability is defined here as a feeling of ease and graciousness in social relationships; normally, it is accompanied by the possession of effective social skills. Some research has shown that people with sociable personalities are more likely to enter politics and also to take leading roles once they enter it. Participation in social groups is highly correlated with political participation. 上課使用 Classroom Only Dominance, Manipulativeness, and Power Drive • It is often supposed that individuals with a personal need for status and power over others naturally gravitate to politics to fulfill their craving. 上課使用 Classroom Only Political Participation as a Function of Social Position • The greatest quantity of research on political participation has related political behavior to social-position variables. 上課使用 Classroom Only Socioeconomic Status (SES) or Class • Socioeconomic status is generally conceived as having three components: education, income, and occupation. These three components are themselves highly intercorrelated, but they are sufficiently different to warrant measuring them separately and then combining them in a single "objective" index of class or status. 上課使用 Classroom Only • Research has shown that the correlation between SES and participation is higher in India and the United States than it is in such other countries as Germany, The Netherlands, Austria, and Japan. Economic modernization is a potent, if slow, force affecting political patterns. 上課使用 Classroom Only • Studies in Norway and Japan show that as patterns of employment shifted from largely primary economic activities (fishing, agriculture, forestry) to secondary (manufacturing) and tertiary (services) ones, more and more persons who had formerly stayed outside the political process were mobilized into the electorate . 上課使用 Classroom Only Place of Residence • Much political participation research has related place of residence to participation levels. Many of the earlier studies showed that rural dwellers were less likely to become active in politics than city dwellers. 上課使用 Classroom Only Organizational Involvement • Many studies have shown that those who are organizationally involved participate in politics at rates far greater than citizens who are not so involved. The effects of social participation on political participation are cumulative. The greater the number of one's affiliations, the greater the likelihood of one's participation in political activity. 上課使用 Classroom Only • Persons belonging to more than one group can find their groups pulling in different political directions; or some groups may urge political action while others urge inaction. Persons in that situation can be thought of as cross-pressured. 上課使用 Classroom Only Community Identification • It was mentioned several times above that persons who are well integrated into their community tend to feel close to the center of community decisions and are more likely to participate in politics. 上課使用 Classroom Only Age • Many studies from around the world have found that participation increases modestly but steadily with age until it reaches a peak in the middle years and then gradually declines with old age. 上課使用 Classroom Only Variations by Sex • The traditional division of labor which assigns political roles to men rather than women has not vanished. The finding that men are more likely to participate in politics than women is one of the most thoroughly substantiated in social science. 上課使用 Classroom Only Race • Participation patterns among Negroes in the United States have undergone revolutionary changes in the past two decades. Negroes have moved from being an inactive and disenfranchised minority, especially in the South, to a more selfassured and vocal group in the 1970s. 上課使用 Classroom Only • If a minority is prevented from using normal political channels for the redress of grievances, does it turn to extraordinary means or even attempt to destroy the political system? • Currently, dark-skinned people all around the world seem to be caught up in a "revolution of rising expectations.” 上課使用 Classroom Only Political Participation as a Function of Environmental Variables • Environmental factors shape human behavior independently of the personal traits of individuals. There are a variety of contextual or environmental variables that can affect political participation; the nonhuman biological and physical aspects of the environment; the cultural milieu; the social structure of the community, and the political setting. 上課使用 Classroom Only • By modernization we • The predominance of mean the industrial primary institutions (family, penetration of village, church) gives way traditional societies to secondary institutions with concomitant (voluntary organizations, changes in their unions, parties, state sociopolitical structures), face-to-face structures and cultural communications give way values. to mass communications, local autonomy to interdependence, tribal loyalties to national loyalties, and so on. 上課使用 Classroom Only Modernization and Political Violence • The relationship between modernization and potential for political violence differs from the relationship between modernization and conventional political participation. Huntington (1968) shows that whereas modernity breeds stability, modernization breeds instability. 上課使用 Classroom Only • It seems that the highly developed as well as the most traditional societies tend to be peaceful and stable but that those societies in the process of modernization seem more likely to be violence prone. 上課使用 Classroom Only Rules of the Game • Persons not eligible to vote in a society are not likely to engage in other political activities either. Mere eligibility, on the other hand, by no means guarantees participation. • Even though suffrage may be "universal," there are often other legal barriers to participation, the most significant being residence requirements. 上課使用 Classroom Only • In some states, mainly in the South, requirements for voting registration, until recently were not only inconvenient but downright difficult. • Compulsory voting has been tried at one time or another in several countries. 上課使用 Classroom Only The Party System • Political parties were invented, among other reasons, to help citizens interpret political information and events and to organize and channel their political participation. The political-party system inevitably affects patterns and rates of participation in politics. 上課使用 Classroom Only