72597 - Analysis of Public Opinion

Academic Year 2019/2020

  • Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
  • Campus: Forli
  • Corso: Second cycle degree programme (LM) in International Relations and Diplomatic Affairs (cod. 9247)

    Also valid for Second cycle degree programme (LM) in Mass media and politics (cod. 8051)

Learning outcomes

The course introduces students to concepts, methods and techniques developed in the social sciences for analyzing opinions on matters of public interest, on political attitudes and electoral behavior. At the end of the course the student knows: some of the most important theories about public opinion formation; how to design and conduct social surveys; howsurveyscan be analysed, through statistical tools, in order to forecast electoral results and to find the underlying factors that influence political behavior; how, in democratic polities, citizens' opinions on political issuesare polarized.

Course contents

The first part of the course provides the categories and basic methodological canons of empirical research on social and political phenomena: definition of the research questions, assumptions, concepts and indicators; survey design, with particular attention to the formulation of questionnaires and the sampling plan; presentation of the survey results and analysis by the main statistical techniques. The second part presents the main assumptions and analyses on factors that influence the formation of political opinions and voting choices: the ascribed characteristics of voters (gender, age, education , family), their position in the social structure (class, religion, territory), their long-term political predispositions (left-right placement, party identifications, values), their assessment on the objects of competition (government, political parties, leaders). The third one applies the method and concepts learned in the first two parts to the analysis of changes in the structure of political competition produced over the last decade by the politicization of migrations and by the rise of "populist" leaders and parties.

Readings/Bibliography

Investigating the views of the public. Explaining the voting behavior. Questions and hypotheses

Harold D. Clarke, David Sanders, Marianne C. Stewart, and Paul Whiteley (2004). Political Choice in Britain, Oxford University Press, pp. 2-35.

Lorenzo De Sio (2011). Competizione e Spazio Politico. Bologna, Il Mulino, pp. 17-79.

Concepts, properties, indicators, variables

Piergiorgio Corbetta, Giancarlo Gasperoni, Maurizio Pisati. Statistica per la ricerca sociale , Il Mulino, Bologna, 2001, pp. 15-44.

Surveying opinions through polls

Piergiorgio Corbetta (2015), La ricerca sociale: metodologia e tecniche. II Le tecniche quantitative, Il Mulino, capp. 3-4-5.

Piergiorgio Corbetta, Giancarlo Gasperoni, Maurizio Pisati (2010). Statistica per la ricerca sociale, Il Mulino, Bologna, cap. 10.

Univariate analysis

Piergiorgio Corbetta, Giancarlo Gasperoni, Maurizio Pisati (2001). Statistica per la ricerca sociale, Il Mulino, Bologna, capp. 2-3.

Bivariate analysis: cross-tabulation and simple regression

Piergiorgio Corbetta, Giancarlo Gasperoni, Maurizio Pisati. Statistica per la ricerca sociale , Il Mulino, Bologna, 2001, capp. 4-6.

Multivariate analysis: multiple and logistic regression (basic notions)

Piergiorgio Corbetta, Giancarlo Gasperoni, Maurizio Pisati. Statistica per la ricerca sociale , Il Mulino, Bologna, 2001, capp. 7-9.

Ascribed characteristics: age, gender, education, family

Piergiorgio Corbetta, Luigi Ceccarini. Le variabili socio-demografiche: generazione, genere, istruzione e famiglia , in: Paolo Bellucci, Paolo Segatti (a cura di). Votare in Italia, 1968-2008. Dall'appartenenza alla scelta , Bologna, il Mulino, 2011, pp. 83-148.

Place in the social structure: class, religion, territory

Marco Maraffi, Hans Schadee, Cristiano Vezzoni, Gabriele Ballarino. Le fratture sociali: classe, religione, territorio . in: Paolo Bellucci, Paolo Segatti (a cura di). Votare in Italia, 1968-2008. Dall'appartenenza alla scelta , Bologna, il Mulino, 2011, pp. 149-186.

Political predispositions: left-right, positional issues, party identification, values

Salvatore Vassallo, Sinistra e destra. Una distinzione sfuggente ma necessaria . In: ITANES, Sinistra e destra: Le radici psicologiche della differenza politica , Bologna, Il Mulino, pp. 19-44.

Roberto Biorcio, Gli antecedenti politici della scelta di voto: l'identificazione di partito e l'autocollocazione sinistra-destra , in: Paolo Segatti (a cura di). Votare in Italia, 1968-2008. Dall'appartenenza alla scelta , Bologna, il Mulino, 2011, pp. 187-211.

Short term evaluations: valence issues, state of the economy, retrospective voting, leaders

Paolo Bellucci, Paolo Segatti, Hans Schadee, Mauro Barisione, Decidere sui temi, sulla competenza dei partiti e sui leader: i fattori di medio periodo , in Paolo Segatti (a cura di). Votare in Italia, 1968-2008. Dall'appartenenza alla scelta , Bologna, il Mulino, 2011, pp. 289-327.

Explaining the populist wave

Salvatore Vassallo e Marco Valbruzzi. 2018. «I partiti della Grande Recessione contro i partiti della Grande Depressione. Un nuovo cleavage o un’altra bolla?» Stato e Mercato, 87–116.

Dani Rodrik. 2018. «Populism and the Economics of Globalization». Journal of International Business Policy, 1–22.

Liesbet Hooghe e Gary Marks. 2018. «Cleavage theory meets Europe’s crises: Lipset, Rokkan, and the transnational cleavage». Journal of European Public Policy 25 (1): 109–35.

Pippa Norris e Ronald Inglehart. 2019. Cultural Backlash: Trump, Brexit, and Authoritarian Populism. Cambridge University Press (chapters 1, 2, 3, 8, 13).

Teaching methods

The course consists of twenty lessons. Students will be encouraged to activelyparticipate. They will also be asked to perform analysis ofWorld Value Survey, European Social Survey andItanes (Italian National Election Studies)survey data. Students are strongly encouraged to read thereferencetexts of each lessonin advance.They will be askedto present and discuss them in class. The diagrams and figures used by the instructor will be made available to students in the days following each lesson.

Assessment methods

Each student must write a paper (15-20,000 characters) on one of the course topics. Students have to base their analysis on scientific literature and elaborations ofWorld Value Survey, European Social Survey, orItanes (Italian National Election Studies) survey data, provided by the instructor.Students who are found to have committed plagiarismwill be excluded from the course and will not be admitted to the final examination. The final marks will be based onpaper assignmentand an interview concerning all the course topics.

Teaching tools

Video projector, PC, Stat Lab.

Office hours

See the website of Salvatore Vassallo

SDGs

Peace, justice and strong institutions

This teaching activity contributes to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals of the UN 2030 Agenda.