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  • - [Instructor] In discussing political socialization,

  • we've talked a lot about factors that go into how people

  • develop their opinions on government and politics.

  • Your family, your friends, your demographic characteristics,

  • like your race, your gender,

  • they all contribute to your views.

  • In this video, I wanna talk about another set of factors

  • that influence a person's political views,

  • and that's political events.

  • And political events include not just elections or debates

  • or laws, but things like terrorist attacks,

  • or international incidents, or economic recessions.

  • These are external events that shape a person's beliefs,

  • either in the short-term or maybe even

  • for the rest of their lives.

  • So what are some examples

  • of how political events influence ideology?

  • Some events can change a person's party identification

  • or how strongly they identify with a party.

  • For example, researchers have found that people

  • who lost family members in the September 11th

  • terrorist attacks became more politically active

  • and have identified more strongly

  • with the Republican party since then.

  • Sometimes events can influence a person's attitudes

  • toward government and the political process as a whole.

  • And here we're not talking about which party a person

  • favors, but rather their ideas about government itself,

  • like is the government trustworthy?

  • Does my vote really count?

  • One example of this is the lasting influence

  • of the Vietnam War and Watergate scandal

  • on public trust in government.

  • You can see in this graph by the Pew Research Center

  • that since polls started asking Americans whether they trust

  • Washington to do what is right always or most of the time,

  • trust peaked in the early Johnson administration,

  • then crashed in the mid-1960s and 1970s

  • and has never really recovered since.

  • So events that happened more than 50 years ago have left

  • a mark on public trust in government that hasn't gone away.

  • But not all political events have

  • such a lasting effect on beliefs.

  • Some events influence opinions for just a short term,

  • like international events that influence

  • Americans' attitudes towards other countries.

  • For example, you can see in this poll data done by Gallup,

  • that the public's favorable opinion about Russia has changed

  • a great deal over the last 20 years,

  • with revelations about Russian hacking coming in 2015

  • leading to a sharp decline in favorable opinions.

  • The last thing I wanna note here is that researchers

  • have discovered that political events that happen

  • when someone is in their formative age, or the age

  • from about 18 to 24, when people are just getting out

  • on their own and starting to form an independent identity.

  • Events that happen then are more likely to have long lasting

  • effects on a person's political beliefs and behaviors.

  • The great recession in 2008 had a strong effect on people

  • in the millennial generation, many of whom were just getting

  • out into the workforce when it hit.

  • Studies have shown that this had an especially

  • strong influence on their ideas about government

  • and money compared to other generations.

  • So events can have both short and long-term effects

  • on people's political beliefs, not just about whether

  • they lean more liberal or conservative,

  • but also about how they think about government itself.

  • And those effects may be felt more strongly depending

  • on what stage a person is in their life

  • or how deeply an event impacts them personally.

- [Instructor] In discussing political socialization,

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政治的事象がイデオロギーに与える影響|APアメリカ政府・政治|カーン・アカデミー (Influence of political events on ideology | AP US Government & Politics | Khan Academy)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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