"An excellent book. . . . The authors contribute usefully to the ongoing debate about the nature of and
prospects for democracy in the U.S."
--Choice
"[This book] reflects years of data collection and much reading and thought about democratic citizenship.
It is a first-rate, . . . very important piece of research that will spark empirical and normative debate for years
to come."
--James H. Kuklinski, Journal of Politics
"Survey research has told us a lot (perhaps too much) about what citizens believe and what they want. It has
told us surprisingly little about what ought to be the middle term between beliefs and desires - what people know
about how the world works. This book does a lot to fill that big hole. With clear prose, a deep sense of the normative
implications of their enterprise, an imaginative new set of surveys, and analytic elegance. Delli Carpini and Keeter
show us the contours of political knowledge and ignorance among Americans why these contours exist, and why they
matter."
--Jennifer L. Hochschild, Professor of Politics and Public Affairs, Princeton University
"This will be a widely read and widely cited book. It represents a major advance on previous research and
a significant contribution to democratic thought."
--Gerald Pomper, Rutgers University
"Survey research has told us a lot (perhaps too much) about what citizens believe and what they want. It has
told us surprisingly little about what ought to be the middle term between beliefs and desires--what people know
about how the world works. This book does a lot to fill that big hole. With clear prose, a deep sense of the normative
implications of the enterprise, an imaginative new set of surveys, and analytic elegance, Delli Carpini and Keeter
show us the contours of political knowledge and ignorance among Americans, why these contours exist, and why they
matter."
--Jennifer L. Hochschild, Princeton University
"A demographic spreadsheet of knowledge about electoral and legislative politics relating to the US government.
Drawing on both new and existing survey data, [the authors] find that many Americans know a lot and many know nothing,
and that the proportion has not changed over the past half century. . . . Also suggests approaches to redistributing
the knowledge."
--Reference & Research Book News
"An ambitious book that should generate debate in graduate seminars on matters ranging from concepts and theories
to the niceties of multivariate analysis. . . . The authors have done a good job of surveying a large amount of
data. Working one's way through this book is a stimulating and rewarding experience."
--John A. Crittenden, Indiana State University (Perspectives on Political Science)
"The book is a good synthesis of the state of political knowledge and research on the subject. The authors
attempt to pull together a variety of theoretical discussions about political learning and political sophistication
while examining a broad array of public opinion data. They maintain a solid normative framework throughout, providing
some new insights and sometimes provocative conclusion. . . A good resource for teachers of public opinions and
U.S. government courses and probably for journalists as well."
--Lonna Rae Atkeson, University of New Mexico (American Politics)
"Analyzing a wealth of survey data (including new data collections), Delli Carpini and Keeter have developed
the most comprehensive analysis to date of the level and distribution of political information. . . . [The authors]
have done a commendable job developing an analysis that yields informative results for democratic theory. Sociologists
studying electoral politics, social movements, the media, and the linkages between stratification and public opinion
would benefit from an engagement with this systematic introduction to debates over political information among
the American public."
--Clem Brooks, Contemporary Sociology
"In [this book], we now have a comprehensive examination of the public's knowledge about politics based on
a number of studies, including a national survey that was designed specifically to investigate political information.
. . . The result is a major contribution to our understanding of how the American public thinks about politics."
--Eric R.A.N. Smith, Political Science Quarterly
Yale University Press Web Site, April, 2001
Summary
In this, the most comprehensive analysis of the American public's knowledge of politics ever written, Michael
Delli Carpini and Scott Keeter explore how levels of knowledge have changed over the past fifty years, how knowledge
is distributed among different groups, and how it is used in political decision-making. The authors draw on extensive
survey data, much of it original, to provide compelling evidence of the benefits politically informed citizens
can enjoy.