Comparing local, national and EU knowledge: The ignorant public reassessed

L Rapeli - Scandinavian Political Studies, 2014 - Wiley Online Library
Scandinavian Political Studies, 2014Wiley Online Library
Empirical research has repeatedly confirmed the political ignorance of ordinary citizens, but
democracy prevails. This article offers a new perspective into this paradox by arguing that
typical political knowledge indicators are inadequate because they only measure national‐
level knowledge. The study makes two contributions. First, it compares national, local and
European Union political knowledge. Second, it does so with a nationally representative
dataset, which comes from a survey from F inland (n= 1,020) devoted solely to political …
Empirical research has repeatedly confirmed the political ignorance of ordinary citizens, but democracy prevails. This article offers a new perspective into this paradox by arguing that typical political knowledge indicators are inadequate because they only measure national‐level knowledge. The study makes two contributions. First, it compares national, local and European Union political knowledge. Second, it does so with a nationally representative dataset, which comes from a survey from Finland (n = 1,020) devoted solely to political knowledge. Two questions are posed: Are the sociodemographic determinants of knowledge the same on all levels of politics? And is public ignorance equally widespread on all levels? Challenging some established findings, the study shows that people in rural communities know more about local politics than urban counterparts, that women know more about local politics than men and that young people are equally knowledgeable about the EU as older people. The results thus indicate that people are to varying extents knowledgeable about varying aspects of politics.
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