1st Edition
Globalisation, Public Opinion and the State Western Europe and East and Southeast Asia
List of Figures and Tables
About the Contributors
Preface
1. Globalisation and public opinion in Western Europe and East and South-East Asia - Ian Marsh
PART I Encountering and assessing globalisation
2. The ‘objective’ impact of globalisation and its socio-political context - Ian Marsh
3. Exposure to Globalisation - Jean Blondel and Ian Marsh
4. How the public evaluates globalisation - Jean Blondel and Ian Marsh
5. Citizens’ attitudes to international organisations and reactions to globalisation - Jean Blondel
PART II Encountering and responding to globalisation
6. Identity, inequality and globalisation - Richard Sinnott
7. Ideology and globalisation - Ian Marsh
8. Finding global solutions? How citizens view policy problems and their solutions - Shaun Wilson and Takashi Inoguchi
9. Globalisation and political participation - Ikuo Kabashima and Gill Steel
10. Determinants of mass attitudes to globalisation - Richard Sinnott
11. Globalisation and citizen attitudes to politics - Ian Marsh
Appendix 1: Characteristics of the Asia-Europe Survey
Appendix 2: Profiles of the 18 countries of the Asia-Europe Survey
Appendix 3: The Asia-Europe Survey
Biography
Takashi Inoguchi is Professor Emeritus at the University of Tokyo, and currently Professor of Political Science, Chuo University, Tokyo. He has published more than 70 books in English and Japanese; he recently co-authored Political Cultures in Asia and Europe (with Jean Blondel, also published by Routledge), and American Democracy Promotion.
Ian Marsh holds the Australia and New Zealand School of Government (ANZSOG) Chair of Government, and is Professor in the Graduate School of Government, University of Sydney; he is also Research Director for the Committee for Economic Development of Australia. His latest books include Into the Future: the Neglect of the Long Term in Australian Politics; and (as editor) Australian Parties in Transition?
‘Empirical studies of mass response to globalization are still lacking. This is especially true for systematic cross-national accounts. The volume edited by Marsh and Inoguchi fills this gap. It maps citizen attitudes in 9 Asian and 9 Western European countries, relying on the high quality ASIA-EUROPE SURVEY. Results show that a majority of citizens in the countries under study feel exposed to and talk about globalization - mostly in positive terms. However, this broadening of the focus of citizen attitudes does not affect the continuing importance of the nation state for attitude formation. Globalization broadens the context of citizens’ experience; it does not replace the older contexts. Students and scholars pursuing the subject will greatly benefit from this volume.’
Hans-Dieter Klingemann is Professor Emeritus at the Social Science Research Centre Berlin (WZB) and Freie Universitaet Berlin, Germany.






