PSCI1202 - Changing American Electorate

Status
A
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
1
Title (text only)
Changing American Electorate
Term
2024C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
PSCI
Section number only
001
Section ID
PSCI1202001
Course number integer
1202
Meeting times
MW 10:15 AM-11:14 AM
Meeting location
EDUC 121
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Daniel Jacob Hopkins
Description
In 1960, a Democratic candidate won a very narrow Presidential victory with just 100,000 votes; in 2000, the Democratic candidate lost but received 500,000 more votes than his opponent. Still, contemporary scholars and journalists have made a variety of arguments about just how much the American political landscape changed in the intervening 40 years, often calling recent decades a transformation. This course explores and critically evaluates those arguments. Key questions include: how, if at all, have Americans political attitudes and ideologies changed? How have their connections to politics changed? What has this meant for the fortunes and strategies of the two parties? How have the parties' base voters and swing voters changed? What changes in American society have advantaged some political messages and parties at the expense of others? Focusing primarily on mass-level politics, we consider a wide range of potential causes, including the role of race in American politics, suburbanization, economic transformations, the evolving constellation and structure of interest groups, declining social capital, the changing role of religion, immigration, and the actions of parties and political elites. For three weeks in the semester, we will take a break from considering broader trends to look at specific elections in some depth.
Course number only
1202
Fulfills
Quantitative Data Analysis
Use local description
No