Constitutional Powers and Politics

UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA PRESSISBN: 9780813950198

How Citizens Think about Authority and Institutional Change

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By Eileen Braman
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UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA PRESS
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HARDBACK
Pages:
258

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Description

Eileen Braman is Associate Professor of Political Science at Indiana University and the author of Law, Politics, and Perception: How Policy Preferences Influence Legal Reasoning (Virginia).

List of Tables Preface Acknowledgements Introduction 1. Conceptualizing and Studying Perceptions of Appropriate Government Authority and Support for Institutional Change 2. Exploring the Role of Rules and Politics in Evaluations of Judicial, Legislative, and Unilateral Executive Action 3. Assessing the Credibility of Constitutional Experts 4. Examining Justifications for Citizens' Evaluations of Legislative Action on Gun Control and Immigration 5. Valuing Institutions: The United States Supreme Court 6. Electoral Expectations and Support for Constitutional Change 7. Institutional Prospects: Measuring Support for Changes to the Supreme Court Conclusion References Appendix

"A well-written, well-researched, and timely book that takes an interdisciplinary approach to addressing questions core to American democracy. Braman uses an impressive array of nationally representative survey experiments and paints a nuanced picture of how the public views institutional change and legitimacy. This is a one-of-a-kind book in the field of political science." - Paul M. Collins Jr., University of Massachusetts, Amherst, author of Friends of the Supreme Court: Interest Groups and Judicial Decision Making "The American political system is in crisis. Gridlock has given way to anti-democratic sentiments that delegitimize the polity. Braman offers a remarkable perspective by pinpointing what shapes Americans' beliefs about institutions. Cutting edge theory and rigorous empirical analyses reveal that when people believe institutions are working against personal and societal interests, they support fundamental change to the governance structure. Braman's foundational contribution reorients conversations by making clear that democracy can be sustained with popular institutional changes." - James N. Druckman, Northwestern University, co-author, with Lawrence R. Jacobs, of Who Governs? Presidents, Public Opinion, and Manipulation

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