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Trust, Efficacy and Modes of Political Participation: A Study of Costa Rican Peasants

Mitchell A. Seligson

British Journal of Political Science, 1980, vol. 10, issue 1, 75-98

Abstract: Those who study political participation will find that recent investigations have been lacking neither in scope nor methodological sophistication. Participation, once conceived of in rather narrow terms (usually focusing exclusively on voting) and whose study was restricted to certain geographic areas only (the United States and Western Europe), is now taken to include a wide range of activities across the globe. Similarly, the causal factors of participation have been expanded as well, so that currently they include the social-psychological, socio-economic, demographic, structural, historical and cultural. Nevertheless, despite the abundance of inquiry, little progress has been made in the development of theory.

Date: 1980
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