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      Do Hostile Media Perceptions Constrain Minipublics? A Study of How Oregon Voters Perceive Citizens' Statements

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      Journal of Deliberative Democracy
      University of Westminster Press

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          Abstract

          The deliberative quality of a minipublic often depends on its ability to inform the opinions of a larger public. The Citizens’ Initiative Review (CIR) aims to do so by producing a Citizens’ Statement, which we conceptualize as a deliberative form of mass media. Like any mass media, this Statement can only influence public opinion to the extent that citizens consider it unbiased and credible. Hostile media perceptions often prevent favorable evaluations of media content, but no prior work has considered whether these perceptions could undermine the output of deliberative minipublics. To examine that possibility, we analyze online survey data on Oregon voters’ assessments of two 2014 Citizens’ Statements. Results showed that voters’ evaluations of the Statements were unaffected by hostile media perceptions. Assessments were more favorable when voters had confidence in their knowledge of the CIR’s design, process, and participants. Evaluations also were more favorable for those voters with greater faith in deliberation’s capacity to render considered judgments. We elaborate on these findings in our discussion section and consider their theoretical and practical implications for implementing minipublics and bolstering their deliberative quality.

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          Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences

          <i>Statistical Power Analysis</i> is a nontechnical guide to power analysis in research planning that provides users of applied statistics with the tools they need for more effective analysis. The Second Edition includes: <br> * a chapter covering power analysis in set correlation and multivariate methods;<br> * a chapter considering effect size, psychometric reliability, and the efficacy of "qualifying" dependent variables and;<br> * expanded power and sample size tables for multiple regression/correlation.<br>
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            Motivated Skepticism in the Evaluation of Political Beliefs

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              The Persuasiveness of Source Credibility: A Critical Review of Five Decades' Evidence

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Deliberative Democracy
                University of Westminster Press
                2634-0488
                May 16 2021
                December 22 2021
                : 17
                : 2
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Pennsylvania State University
                [2 ]Pennsylvannia State University
                Article
                10.16997/jdd.982
                fd7d2745-95c8-42f3-93a9-af20c19206b9
                © 2021

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

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