Author:
Brody Richard A.,Sniderman Paul M.
Abstract
To live is to have problems. However the country as a whole fares, the individual has bills to pay, work to do, children to worry about – to mention only a few of the commonplace problems that people face in their daily lives. Commonplace or not, these are problems that people must wrestle with. They are immediate, inescapable, and serious, far more so for most than the ‘large’ issues facing the country. Students of voting have long suspected that such problems may influence political choices, but key questions remain unanswered. Which personal problems are taken to be political and which non-political? Do personal problems have an impact on voting behavior only if they are taken to be political? When and how do personal problems become translated into political choices? In this paper we shall address such questions as these.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sociology and Political Science
Reference12 articles.
1. Political Issues and Trust in Government: 1964–1970
2. The CPS 1972 American National Election Study, Vol. 3, pp. 807–15.
Cited by
194 articles.
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