公共与非营利雇员的政治发声与公民关注度

Political Voice and Civic Attentiveness of Public and Non-Profit Employees

The American Review of Public Administration · 2014
被引 23
ABS 3

中文导读

利用美国当前人口调查数据,比较公共部门、非营利部门和私营部门雇员在政治发声活动中的参与度和关注度,发现前两者显著高于后者。

Abstract

The scarcity of citizen involvement in the public sphere is an ongoing concern within the literature on democratic citizenship. This study examines two dimensions of engagement—attentiveness and participation—in several political voice activities, looking at citizens working in the public and non-profit sectors in comparison with private-sector employees. Government employees serve the public interest by providing public services in various ways, but they are also individual citizens with varying values, opinions, and attitudes. How does this dual role shape their civic engagement behaviors and habits of political attentiveness? Are they more politically attentive or more likely to engage in political voice activities than individuals working in other sectors? How do non-profit workers fare? Are they more similar to public workers or private workers with regard to participation in these activities? Using the Current Population Survey (CPS) Special Supplement on civic engagement, the analyses here indicate that both government and non-profit employees are significantly more likely to engage in political voice activities than those working in the private sector. By focusing on political voice activities, knowledge, and media use, the study contributes to the literature by providing a more comprehensive profile of individual participation by sector. The findings generate new questions about what such participation might mean for democratic citizenship.

公共管理非营利组织公民参与政治学劳动经济学