Publication | Closed Access
Political Ideologies and Support for Censorship: Is It a Question of Whose Ox Is Being Gored?
12
Citations
10
References
1999
Year
Public OpinionPolitical PolarizationPolitical BehaviorJournalismSocial SciencesCensorshipPolitical CommunicationPolitical ContentPublic SpherePolitical CognitionAmerican PoliticsMedia InstitutionsMedia CensorshipIdentity PoliticsConservative Political AttitudesPolitical IdeologiesFreedom Of SpeechEditorial IndependencePolitical IdeologyPolitical CulturePolitical PluralismPolitical AttitudesWhose OxStatewide SurveyArtsPolitical Science
Two studies are described. one of 381 university students and the other a statewide survey of 295 adults, both of which examine the relationship between attitudinal support for censorship and political ideologies. The results of these studies are interpreted as challenging the view of Suedfeld, Steel, and Schmidt (1994) that support for censorship is a function of both the works in question and the political ideologies of the respondents. In both studies we find that support for censorship is somewhat consistent across messages and images of differing political content. and that support for censorship is generally greater among those with conservative political attitudes, regardless of the content of the works in question. A model of political attitudes (Maddox & Lilie. 1986) that conceptualizes American political idcologies as consisting of two relatively independent dimensions, rather than a single left‐right dimension. is proposed as a more effective means of conceptualizing this issue.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1