Free Expression and Five Democratic Publics: Support for Individual and Media RightsHampton Press, 2004 - 291 pagini To date, scholarly work on public support for free expression has been rather sporadic. The authors propose the theory that those who hold power in a society are more likely than the comparatively disenfranchised to support free speech. They support this proposition with survey data gathered in the U.S. Russia, Hong Kong and Israel. |
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Measuring Support | 19 |
Who Supports Expression? | 33 |
The Relation Between Tolerance and Support | 56 |
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Free Expression and Five Democratic Publics: Support for Individual and ... Julie L. Andsager,Robert O. Wyatt,Ernest L. Martin (Ph.D.) Nu există previzualizare disponibilă - 2004 |
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abstract rights advertising African Americans age groups ANOVA attitudes behavior China Chinese-oriented civil liberties classified information cultures democracy democratic demographic variables education High education education Middle education eigenvalue expressive rights Factor scores Female Male Youngest firearms free expression free speech freedom of expression freedom of speech gender Gibson guns for sale Hong Kong Chinese important income Middle income individual and media individual rights interactions interviews Israel Israeli Arabs Israeli Jews issues Jews Journalists report less supportive levels of support Louis Guttman Low education Middle Low income Middle mass media mass public McClosky media rights Middle education High national security Objectionable Content obscene overall Political Speech predictor public opinion Red Scare religious respondents Russian sample scale significantly social society Soviet Stouffer Sullivan support for free support for individual support for media survey TABLE tion variance Western-oriented 132 women Youngest Middle Oldest