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The invented state : policy misperceptions in the American public

Title
The invented state : policy misperceptions in the American public / Emily Thorson.
ISBN
9780197512326
0197512321
9780197512333
019751233X
9780197512357
Publication
New York : Oxford University Press, 2024.
Physical Description
viii, 170 pages ; 24 cm.
Summary
"Many Americans hold substantial misperceptions about what the government actually does. However, they get the facts wrong not because they are lazy, stupid, or blinded by partisan loyalty. Rather, information about existing policy is largely unavailable to them. News coverage instead prioritizes strategy, novelty, and change. Faced with these gaps in their knowledge, people often engage in inductive reasoning about public policies, especially when they care deeply about a particular issue. They draw on cues from the environment (often including misleading information from elites) and their own cognitive heuristics to make inferences about what the government does. Many of these inferences are incorrect, and taken together they make up what I call the "invented state": widespread misperceptions about public policy. However, correcting these policy misperceptions is highly effective at reducing false beliefs. In addition, providing people with corrective information has downstream effects on attitudes. When they learn how policies - including Social Security, refugee policy, and TANF - really work, their approval of these policies increases, and they also shift their policy priorities. Contrary to pundits' assumptions of a public who is largely indifferent to policy, there is a deep public desire to learn basic facts about how the government works"-- Provided by publisher.
Other formats
Online version: Thorson, Emily A. Invented state New York : Oxford University Press, 2024
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
April 23, 2024
Series
Journalism and political communication unbound.
Journalism and political communication unbound
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Introduction : misperceptions that matter
The contours of the invented state
The policy gap in the information environment
The construction of beliefs about policy
How people interpret policy information
Policy misperceptions and competence
Dismantling the invented state
Conclusion : what comes next?
Citation

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