Learning Democratic Practices: Political Parties, Media and American Political Development

Author:   Janet Youngblood
Publisher:   Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Edition:   Unabridged edition
ISBN:  

9781847187475


Pages:   367
Publication Date:   12 September 2008
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Learning Democratic Practices: Political Parties, Media  and American Political Development


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Overview

How does democracy work in the United States? How are candidates selected to appear on the ballot? How are issues framed for presentation to the electorate? What processes, conversations, institutions, and laws interact to determine how democracy works ? How do new politicians learn to deal with all of this?There is a large and growing literature about these issues, some of which is reviewed in Chapter Two. This book examines selected facts of these issues through the lens of learning theory. It turns out that viewing political parties as communities of practice is a very useful organizing principle. Within this point of view, and research presented in this book is examined how partisans (people who got involved beyond voting and letter-writing) learn how to function within these communities of practice. While this is formally interesting from a learning theory point of view, it turns out that the by-products of this inquiry say a lot about what is happening to democracy in the United States and how it got that way. The core of the book is a set of interviews with partisans. This book examines the factors that operate in political parties as communities of practice to maintain or discourage partisanship. The theories of adult learning involved in this research are from the field of learning from experience. Political socialization is the process by which the individual develops a politicalidentity. In a large research study in Europe, the political socialization processfor adults to learn active citizenship there was studied. This study is a partialreplica of this European study, by John Holford and Ruud van der Veen, et al.[Lifelong Learning, Governance and Active Citizenship in Europe (2003). FinalReport of the ETGACE Research Project: Education and Training for Governance and Active Citizenship in Europe: Analysis of Adult Learning and Design of Formal, Non-Formal and Informal Educational Intervention Strategies.Guildford: University of Surrey Department of Educational Studies.] In thework presented here, the activist in a political party is referred to as a partisan . For purposes of this research, partisans are those who have joined a politicalparty by taking part in membership activities, or as candidates.

Full Product Details

Author:   Janet Youngblood
Publisher:   Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Imprint:   Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Edition:   Unabridged edition
Weight:   0.562kg
ISBN:  

9781847187475


ISBN 10:   1847187471
Pages:   367
Publication Date:   12 September 2008
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Janet Youngblood summarizes in the opening chapters of her book serious deficits of late modern American democracy, such as the increasing role of the mass media, and the famous Supreme Court decision that money is speech . Her own in-depth interviews with party members discloses how all this has ruined the internal party democracy. American political parties nowadays are run as corporations, industries. The bewildering consequence is that such political parties discourage political participation, instead of what is their true mission, to stimulate participation. Janet Youngblood makes clear that this trend must and can be reversed. Ruud van der Veen, Teachers College Columbia University Janet Youngblood makes an important contribution to our understanding of the process by which citizens become partisans. Her unique perspective comes from viewing the process of democracy through the lens of learning theory, and in analyzing political parties and the actors inside of those organizations as communities of practice. Youngblood's book will be of relevance to practitioners as well as scholars in education, political science, and public policy, and I recommend it most highly. Jane Junn, Rutgers University This study is a very important documentation of severe problems in the US democratic system. To analyse the political parties as communities of practice, and to make use of theories of political socialization and adult learning to do so, has proved to be a very productive approach. The author's in-depth investigation reveals highly reprehensible features of the real political conditions of a nation which wants to be the democratic role model of others. Knud Illeris, Professor of Lifelong Learning, Danish University of Education


Janet Youngblood summarizes in the opening chapters of her book serious deficits of late modern American democracy, such as the increasing role of the mass media, and the famous Supreme Court decision that money is speech . Her own in-depth interviews with party members discloses how all this has ruined the internal party democracy. American political parties nowadays are run as corporations, industries. The bewildering consequence is that such political parties discourage political participation, instead of what is their true mission, to stimulate participation. Janet Youngblood makes clear that this trend must and can be reversed. Ruud van der Veen, Teachers College Columbia University Janet Youngblood makes an important contribution to our understanding of the process by which citizens become partisans. Her unique perspective comes from viewing the process of democracy through the lens of learning theory, and in analyzing political parties and the actors inside of those organizations as communities of practice. Youngblood's book will be of relevance to practitioners as well as scholars in education, political science, and public policy, and I recommend it most highly. Jane Junn, Rutgers University This study is a very important documentation of severe problems in the US democratic system. To analyse the political parties as communities of practice, and to make use of theories of political socialization and adult learning to do so, has proved to be a very productive approach. The author's in-depth investigation reveals highly reprehensible features of the real political conditions of a nation which wants to be the democratic role model of others. Knud Illeris, Professor of Lifelong Learning, Danish University of Education


Author Information

Janet Youngblood's interests are adult learning in the practice of democracy. She received her Bachelor's degree at Reed College, Portland, Oregon where she was named a Woodrow Wilson Fellow. Working in English Literature and Writing, she developed an interest in political participation in the generations following the upheavals of the 1960's. Completing her MBA, she focused on the interaction of political economy with political sociology and, from there, proceeded to complete her Doctorate of Education in Adult Learning at Teachers College/Columbia University in order to better understand the way in which adults learn democratic practices, as opposed to authoritarian or oligarchic practices in the modern American context. She has published a second book of essays, Learning Democratic Practices which is a collection of papers from a conference held at Teachers College in 2005, based on her dissertation work. The book is edited by Ruud van der Veen, Danny Wildemeersch, Victoria Marsick, and Janet Youngblood. Her current research is on diversity and tolerance in urban environments with the Flemish Research Council. Her current teaching around this topic is three courses: Learning Democratic Practices, American Political Development, and Politics and the Media.

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