Unit 3 Political Culture and Participation: Understanding How Citizens Engage in Politics

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25 Terms

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Political participation

Any action by individuals or groups intended to influence political outcomes—who governs, what policies are made, and how power is used.

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Conventional participation

Political activity that uses established, legal channels the regime expects (e.g., voting, joining parties, contacting officials).

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Unconventional participation

Political activity that pushes outside routine institutional channels (e.g., strikes, civil disobedience, disruptive protest).

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Free, fair, and competitive elections

An election standard used to judge whether voting can genuinely change who holds power (not just whether elections exist).

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Elections as control

In authoritarian systems, elections may be used to signal regime strength, co-opt elites, gather information on grievances, or create an appearance of legitimacy rather than enable accountability.

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Voter turnout

The share of eligible voters who vote; a clue that must be interpreted in context (it can reflect engagement, but also compulsion, mobilization, or coercion).

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Party identification

A long-term attachment to a political party that often shapes voting choices across elections.

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Social cleavages

Deep, politically relevant social divisions (e.g., class, ethnicity, religion, region) that affect who participates and which groups are represented.

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Economic voting

Voting behavior in which citizens reward or punish incumbents based on economic performance.

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Clientelism

An unequal exchange where political support is traded for targeted material benefits (jobs, cash, services), increasing participation but often weakening accountability and public-goods policymaking.

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Programmatic parties

Parties that compete primarily through policy platforms; participation focuses on debating and choosing policies.

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Personalistic parties

Parties built around a leader’s image, charisma, or patronage networks rather than a consistent policy program.

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Interest groups

Organized groups that seek to influence policy without seeking to hold office (e.g., through advocacy, petitions, member campaigns).

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Corporatism

A system in which the state formally incorporates major groups (such as labor and business) into policy bargaining and representation.

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Civil society

The space of voluntary associations outside the state and the market (community groups, NGOs, religious and professional organizations) that can build organizing capacity and check state power.

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Digital participation

Political engagement through online activity (hashtags, online petitions, livestreaming, coordination) that can lower participation costs but raises risks like surveillance and disinformation.

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Managed participation

A pattern (often under authoritarianism) where some participation is allowed but channeled into controlled, regime-approved forms to prevent broader challenges.

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Protest

Public expression of demands, opposition, or support—often outside routine institutional channels.

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Social movement

A sustained, organized campaign seeking to bring about (or resist) social or political change, using leadership, networks, strategies, and narratives.

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Grievances

Reasons for dissatisfaction that can motivate protest (e.g., inequality, corruption, discrimination, police violence, unpopular reforms), though they do not guarantee mobilization on their own.

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Political opportunity

Perceived openings that make protest more likely—such as elite divisions, election uncertainty, scandals that weaken legitimacy, or reduced repression.

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Mobilizing structures

Organizations and networks that enable collective action and coordination (e.g., unions, student groups, religious institutions, professional associations, digital networks).

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Framing

How movement leaders and participants interpret events and communicate meaning—defining the problem, assigning responsibility, and articulating demands to persuade and recruit.

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Repression

State actions to raise the costs of participation (arrests, police violence, surveillance, censorship, banning organizations, emergency laws), which can deter protest or sometimes backfire and mobilize more support.

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Co-optation

A state strategy to weaken opposition by incorporating movement leaders into government, creating official organizations, or offering selective benefits to divide challengers and reduce independent organizing.

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