Measuring Opinions vs. Non-Opinions - The Case of the USA Patriot Act
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Samuel J. Best
and Monika L. McDermott
The public polling industry frequently faces the challenge of measuring and reporting opinions on topical policy issues about which the public may be uninformed or confused. These situations present a true challenge to pollsters who, through the process of polling itself, could end up manufacturing, rather than measuring, public opinion. Multiple studies have addressed the problems with manufacturing opinions on fictional issues, but none have addressed how or whether these effects occur in the real and possibly more complicated world of actual policy opinion. This paper uses multiple experiments to demonstrate how reported opinions on an actual issue on which the public is largely uninformed the USA Patriot Act vary greatly due to simple variations in question wording, content, and response options due to a lack of public knowledge about the Act. Because an uninformed public resorts to scouring questions for information cues with which they can formulate an answer, different question wordings provide different contexts and considerations for respondents and can thereby result in disparate answers to substantively similar questions.
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Article
- Bloomberg Triumphant: The Collapse of Democratic Hegemony in New York City
- Rural Voters in Presidential Elections, 1992-2004
- The Decline of the American Superpower
- The Ideology of Moderate Republicans in the House
- Situating the New 527 Organizations in Interest Group Theory
- Auditioning for President: Fred Thompson, Leading Man or Part Time Player?
- Measuring Opinions vs. Non-Opinions - The Case of the USA Patriot Act
- Turning Up the Heat on Global Environmental Governance
- Rudy and Mike: Will Either of the Mayors Who Saved New York Get the Chance to Save America?
- Review
- Northern Strategy and Anti-South Polemics: A Review Essay of Thomas Schaller's Whistling Past Dixie
- Reply to Berggren on Whistling Past Dixie