American politics today:
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York
W.W. Norton & Company
[2019]
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Ausgabe: | Seventh Core Edition |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | xxxii, 555, 89 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme 28 cm |
ISBN: | 9780393679915 0393679918 |
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adam_text | Contents Preface xxi Features of the Text and Media Package Acknowledgments xxvii xxiv Part I: Foundations lerstanding American Politics 2 Making Sense of American Government and Politics A Why Do We Have a Government? 6 Forms of Government 9 What Is Politics? 9 Politics Is Conflictual 10 How It Works: Three Key Ideas for Understanding Politics 11 Political Process Matters 13 Politics Is Everywhere 14 Sources of Conflict in American Politics 16 Economic Interests 16 Cultural Values 16 Identity Politics: Racial, Gender, and Ethnic Differences 18 Ideology 20 Resolving Conflict: Democracy and American Political Values 21 Democracy 21 Liberty 22 Equality 23 How to Be a Critical Consumer of Politics 24 Media Checklist for Assessing Reporting on Politics Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 29 27 28 2. The Constitution and the Founding 32 The Historical Context of the Constitution 34 The Articles of Confederation: The First Attempt at Government 35 Political Theories of the Framers 38 Economic Interests 40 The Politics of Compromise at the Constitutional Convention Majority Rule versus Minority Rights 42 42 xi
Small States versus Large States 44 Legislative Power versus Executive Power 45 National Power versus State and Locai Power 47 Slave States versus Nonslave States 48 Ratification 51 The Antifederalists’Concerns 51 The Federalists’ Strategies 52 The Constitution: A Framework for Government 54 Exclusive Powers 54 How It Works: Checks and Balances 56 Shared Powers 58 Negative or Checking Powers 60 Is the Constitution a “Living” Document? Ambiguity 63 Changing the Constitution 64 Multiple Interpreters 67 Unpacking the Conflict Study Giide 71 63 69 . Federalism 74 What Is Federalism and Why Does It Matter? 76 Levels of Government and Their Degrees ofAutonomy 77 A Comparative Perspective 78 Balancing National and State Power in the Constitution 79 A Strong National Government 79 State Powers and Limits on National Power 82 Clauses that Favor Both Perspectives 82 The Evolving Concept of Federalism 83 The Early Years 83 The Emergence of States’ Rights and Dual Federalism 85 Cooperative Federalism 88 Federalism Today 89 Cooperative Federalism Lives On: Fiscal Federalism 90 How It Works: Versions of Federalism 92 Expanding National Power 94 The States Fight Back 95 Fighting for States’ Rights: The Role ofthe Modern Supreme Court 96 Assessing Federalism 100 Policy Preferences 100 Advantages of a Strong Role for the States 100 Disadvantages of Too Much State Power 102
104 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 105 4, Civil Liberties 108 Defining Civil Liberties 110 Balancing Interests no Drawing Lines 112 The Origins of Civil Liberties 114 Origins ofthe Bill of Rights 114 Selective Incorporation and the Fourteenth Amendment 116 How It Works: The First Amendment Freedom of Religion 118 120 The Establishment Clause and Separation of Church and State 121 The Free Exercise Clause 123 Freedom of Speech, Assembly, and the Press 125 Generally Protected Expression 125 Less Protected Speech and Publications 133 The Right to Bear Arms 137 Law, Order, and the Rights of Criminal Defendants 139 The Fourth Amendment: Unreasonable Searches and Seizures 140 The Fifth Amendment 145 The Sixth Amendment: The Right to Legal Counsel and a Jury Trial 147 The Eighth Amendment: Cruel and Unusual Punishment 147 Privacy Rights 148 Abortion Rights 149 Gay Rights 150 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 153 5. 152 I56 The Context of Civil Rights African Americans 159 Native Americans 162 Latinos and Latinas 163 Asian Americans 164 Women and Civil Rights 165 The LGBTQCommunity 166 158
The Racial Divide Today 167 Discriminatory Treatment 167 Differences in Voting Access 168 Socioeconomic Indicators 170 Criminal Justice and Hate Crimes 172 Key Players In the Conflict Over Civil Rights 175 Social Movements 175 The Courts 181 How It Works: Civil Rights 188 Congress 192 The President 195 Civil Rights Issues Today 197 Affirmative Action or Reverse Discrimination 198 Multicultural Issues and Immigration Policy 200 Unpacking the Conflict 205 204 Study Guide Part Ü: Politics 6. Public Opinion 208 What Is Public Opinion? 210 Different Kinds of Opinion 211 Where Do Opinions Come From? 213 Socialization: Families, Communities, and Networks 213 Events 214 Group Identity 214 Politicians and Other Political Actors 216 Considerations: The Process of Forming Opinions 217 Measuring Public Opinion 222 How It Works: Measuring What a Nation of 330 Million Thinks: A Checklist 224 Problems in Measuring Public Opinion 226 How Useful Are Surveys? 229 What Americans Think about Politics 231 Ideological Polarization 231 Evaluations of Government and Officeholders 233 Policy Preferences 236 Does Public Opinion Matter? 238 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 241 239
7. The Media 244 Political Media Today 246 Historical Overview: How Did We Get Here? 246 Media Sources in the Twenty-First Century 248 Where Do People Get Political Information? 252 How Do Politicians Use the Media? How Do the Media Use Politicians? 253 Politicians’ Media Strategies 253 The Pressures and Legal Limits on Reporters 255 How Do the Media Influence Their Audience? How It Works: How News Makes It to the Public 257 258 Media Bias and Partisanship 260 Filtering and Framing 262 Do the Media Work? 265 Lack of Citizen Interest 266 Market Forces 266 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 271 270 8. Political Parties 274 What Are Political Parties and Where Did Today’s Parties Come From? 276 History ofAmerican Political Parties 277 American Political Parties Today 281 The Party Organization 281 The Party in Government 283 The Party in the Electorate 285 The Role of Political Parties in American Politics 291 Organizing Elections 292 How It Works: Nominating Presidential Candidates Cooperation in Government 298 Minor Parties 301 How Well Do Parties Operate? 303 Recruiting Good Candidates 303 Working Together in Campaigns 303 Working Together in Office 304 Providing Accountability 305 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 307 306 296
f. Elections 310 312 How Do American Elections Work? Functions ofElections Two Stages ofElections Mechanics ofElections Presidential Elections 312 313 314 316 How It Works: The Electoral College 320 Electoral Campaigns 324 The “Fundamentals” 324 Settingthe Stage 326 Before the Campaign 327 Primaries and the General Election 331 Campaign Advertising: Getting the Word Out 333 Campaign Finance 337 How Do Voters Decide? 342 Who Votes, and Why? 342 How Do People Vote? 343 Who (Usually) Wins? 345 * * Understanding the 2018 and 2020 Elections The Path to 2020: The 2018 Elections 347 The 2020 Elections 348 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 355 354 10. Interest Groups 358 What Are Interest Groups? The Business ofLobbying 3 62 360 Organizational Structures 365 Staff 367 Membership 369 Resources and Challenges 369 371 The Logic of Collective Action 372 Getting Organized Interest Group Strategies 374 Inside Strategies 374 How It Works: Lobbying the Federal Government: Inside and Outside Strategies 376 Outside Strategies 379 Choosing Strategies 383 347
How Much Power Do Interest Groups Have? 384 What Determines When Interest Groups Succeed? 387 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 391 389 Part III: Institutions 11. Congress 394 Congress and the People 397 Congress and the Constitution 397 Congress Represents the People (or Tries To) 399 Members of Congress Want to Keep Their Jobs 404 Redistricting Connects Representation and Elections 411 The Responsibility-Responsiveness Dilemma 416 The Structure of Congress Informal Structures 417 Formal Structures 418 416 How a Bill Becomes a Law 426 The Conventional Process 426 How It Works: Passing Legislation 428 Deviations from the Conventional Process 432 Differences in the House and Senate Legislative Processes 433 Oversight 435 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 439 437 12. The Presidency 442 The Development of Presidential Power 444 Early Years through World War I 445 The Great Depression through the Present 446 The President’s Job Description Head ofthe Executive Branch 448 Appointments 449 Executive Orders 450 Commander in Chief 451 448 How It Works: How Presidents Make Policy outside the Legislative Process 452 Treaty Making and Foreign Policy 455 Legislative Power 456
Pardons and Commutations 459 Executive Privilege 459 The Presidency as an Institution 462 The Executive Office of the President 462 The Vice President 463 The President’s Cabinet 464 Presidential Power Today 465 Presidents, Unilateral Action, and Policy Making 466 Control Over the Interpretation and Implementation ofLaws 467 Congressional Responses to Unilateral Action 468 Presidents as Politicians 470 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 475 474 13. The Bureaucracy What Is the Federal Bureaucracy? 480 What Do Bureaucrats Do? 480 How It Works: Bureaucracy and Legislation 482 Bureaucratic Expertise and Its Consequences 486 How Has the American Bureaucracy Grown? 490 The Beginning ofAmerica’s Bureaucracy 49 о Building a New American State: The Progressive Era 491 The New Deal, the Great Society, and the Reagan Revolution 491 The Modern Federal Bureaucracy 494 The Structure ofthe Federal Government 494 The Size of the Federal Government 497 The Human Face of the Bureaucracy 500 Civil Service Regulations 501 Limits on Political Activity 502 Political Appointees and the Senior Executive Service 502 Controlling the Bureaucracy Agency Organization 504 Monitoring 506 Correcting Violations 507 The Consequences of Control 509 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 511 509 503
14. The Courts 514 The Development of an Independent and Powerful Federal Judiciary 516 The Founders’ Views ofthe Courts: The Weakest Branch? 517 Judicial Review and Marbury v. Madison 518 Judicial Review in Practice 519 The American Legal and Judicial System 521 Court Fundamentals 521 Structure of the Court System and Federalism 523 How It Works: The Court System 524 How Judges are Selected 527 Access to the Supreme Court 532 The Court’s Workload 532 Rules ofAccess 533 The Court’s Criteria 534 Internal Politics 535 Hearing Cases before the Supreme Court 536 Briefs 536 Oral Argument 537 Conference 538 Opinion Writing 539 Supreme Court Decision Making 541 Legal Factors 541 Political Factors 542 The Role of the Court in Our Politicai System 547 Compliance and Implementation 547 Relations with the Other Branches 547 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 553 552 ■ Appendix The Declaration of Independence A1 The Articles of Confederation A3 The Constitution of the United States of America Amendments to the Constitution All The Federalist Papers A16 Endnotes A23 Study Guide Answer Key Credits A53 Glossary/index A57 A6 A51 Contents XÍX
|
adam_txt |
Contents Preface xxi Features of the Text and Media Package Acknowledgments xxvii xxiv Part I: Foundations lerstanding American Politics 2 Making Sense of American Government and Politics A Why Do We Have a Government? 6 Forms of Government 9 What Is Politics? 9 Politics Is Conflictual 10 How It Works: Three Key Ideas for Understanding Politics 11 Political Process Matters 13 Politics Is Everywhere 14 Sources of Conflict in American Politics 16 Economic Interests 16 Cultural Values 16 Identity Politics: Racial, Gender, and Ethnic Differences 18 Ideology 20 Resolving Conflict: Democracy and American Political Values 21 Democracy 21 Liberty 22 Equality 23 How to Be a Critical Consumer of Politics 24 Media Checklist for Assessing Reporting on Politics Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 29 27 28 2. The Constitution and the Founding 32 The Historical Context of the Constitution 34 The Articles of Confederation: The First Attempt at Government 35 Political Theories of the Framers 38 Economic Interests 40 The Politics of Compromise at the Constitutional Convention Majority Rule versus Minority Rights 42 42 xi
Small States versus Large States 44 Legislative Power versus Executive Power 45 National Power versus State and Locai Power 47 Slave States versus Nonslave States 48 Ratification 51 The Antifederalists’Concerns 51 The Federalists’ Strategies 52 The Constitution: A Framework for Government 54 Exclusive Powers 54 How It Works: Checks and Balances 56 Shared Powers 58 Negative or Checking Powers 60 Is the Constitution a “Living” Document? Ambiguity 63 Changing the Constitution 64 Multiple Interpreters 67 Unpacking the Conflict Study Giide 71 63 69 . Federalism 74 What Is Federalism and Why Does It Matter? 76 Levels of Government and Their Degrees ofAutonomy 77 A Comparative Perspective 78 Balancing National and State Power in the Constitution 79 A Strong National Government 79 State Powers and Limits on National Power 82 Clauses that Favor Both Perspectives 82 The Evolving Concept of Federalism 83 The Early Years 83 The Emergence of States’ Rights and Dual Federalism 85 Cooperative Federalism 88 Federalism Today 89 Cooperative Federalism Lives On: Fiscal Federalism 90 How It Works: Versions of Federalism 92 Expanding National Power 94 The States Fight Back 95 Fighting for States’ Rights: The Role ofthe Modern Supreme Court 96 Assessing Federalism 100 Policy Preferences 100 Advantages of a Strong Role for the States 100 Disadvantages of Too Much State Power 102
104 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 105 4, Civil Liberties 108 Defining Civil Liberties 110 Balancing Interests no Drawing Lines 112 The Origins of Civil Liberties 114 Origins ofthe Bill of Rights 114 Selective Incorporation and the Fourteenth Amendment 116 How It Works: The First Amendment Freedom of Religion 118 120 The Establishment Clause and Separation of Church and State 121 The Free Exercise Clause 123 Freedom of Speech, Assembly, and the Press 125 Generally Protected Expression 125 Less Protected Speech and Publications 133 The Right to Bear Arms 137 Law, Order, and the Rights of Criminal Defendants 139 The Fourth Amendment: Unreasonable Searches and Seizures 140 The Fifth Amendment 145 The Sixth Amendment: The Right to Legal Counsel and a Jury Trial 147 The Eighth Amendment: Cruel and Unusual Punishment 147 Privacy Rights 148 Abortion Rights 149 Gay Rights 150 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 153 5. 152 I56 The Context of Civil Rights African Americans 159 Native Americans 162 Latinos and Latinas 163 Asian Americans 164 Women and Civil Rights 165 The LGBTQCommunity 166 158
The Racial Divide Today 167 Discriminatory Treatment 167 Differences in Voting Access 168 Socioeconomic Indicators 170 Criminal Justice and Hate Crimes 172 Key Players In the Conflict Over Civil Rights 175 Social Movements 175 The Courts 181 How It Works: Civil Rights 188 Congress 192 The President 195 Civil Rights Issues Today 197 Affirmative Action or Reverse Discrimination 198 Multicultural Issues and Immigration Policy 200 Unpacking the Conflict 205 204 Study Guide Part Ü: Politics 6. Public Opinion ' 208 What Is Public Opinion? 210 Different Kinds of Opinion 211 Where Do Opinions Come From? 213 Socialization: Families, Communities, and Networks 213 Events 214 Group Identity 214 Politicians and Other Political Actors 216 Considerations: The Process of Forming Opinions 217 Measuring Public Opinion 222 How It Works: Measuring What a Nation of 330 Million Thinks: A Checklist 224 Problems in Measuring Public Opinion 226 How Useful Are Surveys? 229 What Americans Think about Politics 231 Ideological Polarization 231 Evaluations of Government and Officeholders 233 Policy Preferences 236 Does Public Opinion Matter? 238 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 241 239
7. The Media 244 Political Media Today 246 Historical Overview: How Did We Get Here? 246 Media Sources in the Twenty-First Century 248 Where Do People Get Political Information? 252 How Do Politicians Use the Media? How Do the Media Use Politicians? 253 Politicians’ Media Strategies 253 The Pressures and Legal Limits on Reporters 255 How Do the Media Influence Their Audience? How It Works: How News Makes It to the Public 257 258 Media Bias and Partisanship 260 Filtering and Framing 262 Do the Media Work? 265 Lack of Citizen Interest 266 Market Forces 266 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 271 270 8. Political Parties 274 What Are Political Parties and Where Did Today’s Parties Come From? 276 History ofAmerican Political Parties 277 American Political Parties Today 281 The Party Organization 281 The Party in Government 283 The Party in the Electorate 285 The Role of Political Parties in American Politics 291 Organizing Elections 292 How It Works: Nominating Presidential Candidates Cooperation in Government 298 Minor Parties 301 How Well Do Parties Operate? 303 Recruiting Good Candidates 303 Working Together in Campaigns 303 Working Together in Office 304 Providing Accountability 305 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 307 306 296
f. Elections 310 312 How Do American Elections Work? Functions ofElections Two Stages ofElections Mechanics ofElections Presidential Elections 312 313 314 316 How It Works: The Electoral College 320 Electoral Campaigns 324 The “Fundamentals” 324 Settingthe Stage 326 Before the Campaign 327 Primaries and the General Election 331 Campaign Advertising: Getting the Word Out 333 Campaign Finance 337 How Do Voters Decide? 342 Who Votes, and Why? 342 How Do People Vote? 343 Who (Usually) Wins? 345 * * Understanding the 2018 and 2020 Elections The Path to 2020: The 2018 Elections 347 The 2020 Elections 348 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 355 354 10. Interest Groups 358 What Are Interest Groups? The Business ofLobbying 3 62 360 Organizational Structures 365 Staff 367 Membership 369 Resources and Challenges 369 371 The Logic of Collective Action 372 Getting Organized Interest Group Strategies 374 Inside Strategies 374 How It Works: Lobbying the Federal Government: Inside and Outside Strategies 376 Outside Strategies 379 Choosing Strategies 383 347
How Much Power Do Interest Groups Have? 384 What Determines When Interest Groups Succeed? 387 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 391 389 Part III: Institutions 11. Congress 394 Congress and the People 397 Congress and the Constitution 397 Congress Represents the People (or Tries To) 399 Members of Congress Want to Keep Their Jobs 404 Redistricting Connects Representation and Elections 411 The Responsibility-Responsiveness Dilemma 416 The Structure of Congress Informal Structures 417 Formal Structures 418 416 How a Bill Becomes a Law 426 The Conventional Process 426 How It Works: Passing Legislation 428 Deviations from the Conventional Process 432 Differences in the House and Senate Legislative Processes 433 Oversight 435 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 439 437 12. The Presidency 442 The Development of Presidential Power 444 Early Years through World War I 445 The Great Depression through the Present 446 The President’s Job Description Head ofthe Executive Branch 448 Appointments 449 Executive Orders 450 Commander in Chief 451 448 How It Works: How Presidents Make Policy outside the Legislative Process 452 Treaty Making and Foreign Policy 455 Legislative Power 456
Pardons and Commutations 459 Executive Privilege 459 The Presidency as an Institution 462 The Executive Office of the President 462 The Vice President 463 The President’s Cabinet 464 Presidential Power Today 465 Presidents, Unilateral Action, and Policy Making 466 Control Over the Interpretation and Implementation ofLaws 467 Congressional Responses to Unilateral Action 468 Presidents as Politicians 470 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 475 474 13. The Bureaucracy What Is the Federal Bureaucracy? 480 What Do Bureaucrats Do? 480 How It Works: Bureaucracy and Legislation 482 Bureaucratic Expertise and Its Consequences 486 How Has the American Bureaucracy Grown? 490 The Beginning ofAmerica’s Bureaucracy 49 о Building a New American State: The Progressive Era 491 The New Deal, the Great Society, and the Reagan Revolution 491 The Modern Federal Bureaucracy 494 The Structure ofthe Federal Government 494 The Size of the Federal Government 497 The Human Face of the Bureaucracy 500 Civil Service Regulations 501 Limits on Political Activity 502 Political Appointees and the Senior Executive Service 502 Controlling the Bureaucracy Agency Organization 504 Monitoring 506 Correcting Violations 507 The Consequences of Control 509 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 511 509 503
14. The Courts 514 The Development of an Independent and Powerful Federal Judiciary 516 The Founders’ Views ofthe Courts: The Weakest Branch? 517 Judicial Review and Marbury v. Madison 518 Judicial Review in Practice 519 The American Legal and Judicial System 521 Court Fundamentals 521 Structure of the Court System and Federalism 523 How It Works: The Court System 524 How Judges are Selected 527 Access to the Supreme Court 532 The Court’s Workload 532 Rules ofAccess 533 The Court’s Criteria 534 Internal Politics 535 Hearing Cases before the Supreme Court 536 Briefs 536 Oral Argument 537 Conference 538 Opinion Writing 539 Supreme Court Decision Making 541 Legal Factors 541 Political Factors 542 The Role of the Court in Our Politicai System 547 Compliance and Implementation 547 Relations with the Other Branches 547 Unpacking the Conflict Study Guide 553 552 ■ Appendix The Declaration of Independence A1 The Articles of Confederation A3 The Constitution of the United States of America Amendments to the Constitution All The Federalist Papers A16 Endnotes A23 Study Guide Answer Key Credits A53 Glossary/index A57 A6 A51 Contents XÍX |
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spelling | Bianco, William T. 1960- Verfasser (DE-588)1019562676 aut American politics today William T. Bianco, Indiana University, Bloomington, David T. Canon, University of Wisconsin, Madison Seventh Core Edition New York W.W. Norton & Company [2019] xxxii, 555, 89 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme 28 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Understanding American politics -- The Constitution and the founding -- Federalism -- Civil liberties -- Civil rights -- Part II : Politics Public opinion -- The media -- Political parties -- Elections -- Interest groups -- Part III : Institutions Congress -- The Presidency -- The bureaucracy -- The courts Political science United States / Politics and government / Textbooks Politics and government United States Textbooks Canon, David T. Verfasser aut Digitalisierung UB Regensburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032795328&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Bianco, William T. 1960- Canon, David T. American politics today Understanding American politics -- The Constitution and the founding -- Federalism -- Civil liberties -- Civil rights -- Part II : Politics Public opinion -- The media -- Political parties -- Elections -- Interest groups -- Part III : Institutions Congress -- The Presidency -- The bureaucracy -- The courts |
title | American politics today |
title_alt | Understanding American politics -- The Constitution and the founding -- Federalism -- Civil liberties -- Civil rights -- Part II : Politics Public opinion -- The media -- Political parties -- Elections -- Interest groups -- Part III : Institutions Congress -- The Presidency -- The bureaucracy -- The courts |
title_auth | American politics today |
title_exact_search | American politics today |
title_exact_search_txtP | American politics today |
title_full | American politics today William T. Bianco, Indiana University, Bloomington, David T. Canon, University of Wisconsin, Madison |
title_fullStr | American politics today William T. Bianco, Indiana University, Bloomington, David T. Canon, University of Wisconsin, Madison |
title_full_unstemmed | American politics today William T. Bianco, Indiana University, Bloomington, David T. Canon, University of Wisconsin, Madison |
title_short | American politics today |
title_sort | american politics today |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032795328&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT biancowilliamt americanpoliticstoday AT canondavidt americanpoliticstoday |