Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 75 OF 95

Main Title The government-citizen disconnect /
Author Mettler, Suzanne,
Publisher Russell Sage Foundation,
Year Published 2018
OCLC Number 1018041477
ISBN 9780871546685; 087154668X
Subjects United States--Social policy ; Welfare state--United States ; Political sociology--United States ; United States--Politics and government--Public opinion ; United States--Politics and government--1989- ; POLITICAL SCIENCE--Public Policy--Social Policy ; POLITICAL SCIENCE--Government--General ; POLITICAL SCIENCE--General ; POLITICAL SCIENCE--Public Policy--Social Services & Welfare ; SOCIAL SCIENCE--Research ; èOffentliche Meinung ; Wohlfahrtsstaat ; Sozialstaat ; Sozialpolitik ; Politische Soziologie ; USA
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
Checkout
Status
ELBM  HN65.M47 2018 AWBERC Library/Cincinnati,OH 12/12/2022
Collation xviii, 241 pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cm
Notes
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Notes
A time of contradiction -- The market recedes, government responds -- We are all beneficiaries now -- Different lenses -- Unequal voice -- Reconnecting citizens and government -- Appendices: Design and procedures for the social and governmental issues and participation study ; Questionnaire for the social and governmental issues and participation study ; Survey response rate and comparison to existing studies ; Interview schedule for open-ended phone interviews ; Additional chapter 4 and 5 tables ; T-tests of Kentucky voter turnout. "Americans' relationship to the federal government is paradoxical. Polls show that public opinion regarding the government has plummeted to all-time lows, with only one in five saying they trust the government or believe that it operates in their interest. Yet, at the same time, more Americans than ever benefit from some form of government social provision--96 percent of adults have received benefit from at least one of them, and the average person has utilized five. The fact that people have benefited from these policies bears little positive effect on their attitudes toward government. Political scientist Suzanne Mettler calls this growing gulf between people's perceptions of government and the actual role it plays in their lives as the 'government-citizen disconnect.' Mettler finds that shared identities and views about welfare are more powerful and consistent influences. The government-citizen disconnect's examination of hostility toward government at a time when most Americans will at some point rely on the social benefits it provides helps us better understand the roots of today's fractious political climate"--Back cover.