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                                       Details for article 8 of 10 found articles
 
 
  The ever-shifting psychological foundations of democratic theory: Do citizens have the right stuff?
 
 
Title: The ever-shifting psychological foundations of democratic theory: Do citizens have the right stuff?
Author: Tetlock, Philip E.
Appeared in: Critical review
Paging: Volume 12 (1998) nr. 4 pages 545-561
Year: 1998
Contents: Timur Kuran's Private Truths, Public Lies makes a compelling case that people often misrepresent their private preferences in response to real or imagined social pressures, that the relative power of competing interest groups to punish opinion deviance and reward conformity determines the patterns and pervasiveness of preference falsification, and that preference falsifi-cation helps explain such diverse outcomes as the persistence and sudden collapse of communism and the precarious persistence of racial preferences in the United States and of the caste system in India. Although preference falsification is important and raises questions about the legitimacy of the opinions expressed in opinion polls and elections, it does not seem widespread enough to warrant the conclusion that ordinary people lack the courage necessary to make democracy work.
Publisher: Routledge
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

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