BOOKS - The Roles of Public Opinion Research in Canadian Government (IPAC Series in P...
US $5.64
579740
579740
The Roles of Public Opinion Research in Canadian Government (IPAC Series in Public Management and Governance)
Author: Christopher Page
Year: August 28, 2006
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 14 MB
Language: English
Year: August 28, 2006
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 14 MB
Language: English
It is a common assumption that governments use public opinion research primarily to help them make popular decisions about major policy issues but few scholars have ever looked beyond this assumption to investigate its veracity. In The Roles of Public Opinion Research in Canadian Government , Christopher Page pulls back the curtain on the uses of polls and focus groups. Stressing public opinion on policy rather than on support for parties, Page explores the relationships between government officials and pollsters, and the contributions of public opinion research to the policy process. Three high-profile policies are considered in the patriation of the constitution and the establishment of the Charter of Rights by the Trudeau government, the introduction of the Goods and Services Tax by the Mulroney government, and the controversial strengthening of gun control by the Chretien government. The Roles of Public Opinion Research in Canadian Government demonstrates that opinion research has a greater variety of roles than is often recognized, and that, despite conventional wisdom, its foremost impact is to help governments determine how to communicate with citizens. It is an essential contribution to the study of Canadian politics, filling a major gap in the scholarship.