总统与公民权力:美国的民意、第二波女权主义与政党政治

IF 1.4 1区 社会学 Q2 SOCIOLOGY Cultural Sociology Pub Date : 2022-12-23 DOI:10.1177/17499755221130187
Willa Sachs, J. Alexander
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章将社会运动、公众舆论和总统权力之间的关系理论化。虽然社会学家和社会运动学者长期以来忽视了这些相互联系,但我们认为它们构成了美国政治生活的关键基础。根据公民领域理论,我们表明,至少在形式上的民主政体中,国家权力的行使一直受制于公众舆论,通过以公众名义向国家施压的社会运动。我们展示了社会运动如何相互竞争,以代表“公众舆论”发言。在表达“公众”的愿望时,运动被想象成一个假定的整体,行使我们所说的“公民权力”。我们以第二波女权运动和反对它的反运动为实证案例研究,考察了它们与三届特别具有代表性的总统政府之间的相互作用:理查德·尼克松、吉米·卡特和罗纳德·里根。我们认为,当总统组织国家权力时,这种正式权力的有效运作是由社会运动的公民权力实现的,社会运动的根源在于集体意义,其产生发生在国家之外。
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Presidential versus Civil Power: Public Opinion, Second-Wave Feminism, and Party Politics in the USA
This article theorizes the relationship between social movements, public opinion, and presidential power. While sociologists and social movement scholars have long neglected these interconnections, we argue that they form a key foundation of American political life. Drawing on civil sphere theory, we show that, at least in formally democratic regimes, the exercise of state power is continuously subject to public opinion, via social movements that pressure states in the public’s name. We demonstrate how social movements compete with one another to speak on behalf of ‘public opinion.’ In giving expression to the desires of ‘the public’, imagined as a putative whole, movements exercise what we call ‘civil power.’ Taking the second-wave feminist movement and the countermovements that arose against it as our empirical case study, we examine their interaction with three particularly illustrative presidential administrations: that of Richard Nixon, Jimmy Carter, and Ronald Reagan. While presidents organize state power, we argue, the effective functioning of this formal power is enabled by the civil power of social movements, whose roots are located in collective meanings and whose generation occurs outside the state.
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来源期刊
Cultural Sociology
Cultural Sociology SOCIOLOGY-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
10.50%
发文量
36
期刊介绍: Cultural Sociology publishes empirically oriented, theoretically sophisticated, methodologically rigorous papers, which explore from a broad set of sociological perspectives a diverse range of socio-cultural forces, phenomena, institutions and contexts. The objective of Cultural Sociology is to publish original articles which advance the field of cultural sociology and the sociology of culture. The journal seeks to consolidate, develop and promote the arena of sociological understandings of culture, and is intended to be pivotal in defining both what this arena is like currently and what it could become in the future. Cultural Sociology will publish innovative, sociologically-informed work concerned with cultural processes and artefacts, broadly defined.
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