Politiek Ironisch heldin converse the nature of belief systems in mass publics Bakken Natuur Won
Opinion | We Can't Even Agree on What Is Tearing Us Apart - The New York Times
Ideology and discourse analysis: Journal of Political Ideologies: Vol 11, No 2
References - Anxious Politics
The nature of belief systems in mass publics (1964)
4. Do Americans Care about Inequality?
Neither Liberal nor Conservative: Ideological Innocence in the American Public, Kinder, Kalmoe
Professor Lynda Powell
Converse, Zaller, and Mass Opinion in Perspective Political Beliefs, Information, and the Mass Eelctorate. - ppt download
PDF) The Application of Individual Differences Scaling to the Measurement of Political Ideology
Ideology: A Definitional Analysis - John Gerring, 1997
The nature of belief systems in mass publics (1964)
The political scientist Philip Converse has died - The Washington Post
The nature of belief systems in mass publics (1964)
Long Division | The New Yorker
Lecture 06- Nature of Public Opinion - Lecture 06: Starting Voter Section of Course Outline of the - Studocu
Shared understandings of vaccine hesitancy: How perceived risk and trust in vaccination frame individuals' vaccine acceptance | PLOS ONE
Political Concepts and Ideological Morphology - Freeden - 1994 - Journal of Political Philosophy - Wiley Online Library
Graph-Theoretic Analysis of Belief System Dynamics under Logic Constraints | Scientific Reports
Neither influence nor selection: Examining co-evolution of political orientation and social networks in the NetSense and NetHealth studies | PLOS ONE
Approval of a Political Institution: A Comparison of Winners and Losers
The Nature of Belief Systems Reconsidered - 1st Edition - Jeffrey Fri
Beyond Good Old-Fashioned Ideology Theory, Part One – Culture, Cognition, and Action (culturecog)
The Use of Converse's Mass Belief Systems Model to Measure Public Opinion on Land Use Regulation: A Comment on deHaven-Smith's Article - Ivonne Audirac, Anne H. Shoemyen, 1989
For elites, politics is driven by ideology. For voters, it's not. - Vox