Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 184
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-7425-6211-0 • Paperback • December 2007 • $48.00 • (£37.00)
978-1-4616-4662-4 • eBook • December 2007 • $45.50 • (£35.00)
Paul R. Brewer is associate professor in the Department of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Wisconsin _Milwaukee.
Chapter 1 1. Introduction
Chapter 2 2. Public Opinion about Gay Rights
Chapter 3 3. Whose Rights? Public Opinion about Gays, Lesbians, and Homosexuality
Chapter 4 4. From the Podium and the Pulpit: Opinion Leadership and Gay Rights
Chapter 5 5. Using Values to Frame Gay Rights: Traditional Morals, Equal Rights, or Special Rights?
Chapter 6 6. The Foundations of Opinion about Gay Rights: Changes over Time, Differences across Contexts
Chapter 7 7. The Meanings of Public Opinion about Gay Rights
Chapter 8 Appendix A: The Pooled 2003-2004 Pew Research Center Surveys
Chapter 9 Appendix B: The 1993 ANES Pilot Study and the 2003 October Pew Survey
Chapter 10 Appendix C: Content Analysis Procedure
Chapter 11 Appendix D: The 1999 Experiment
Chapter 12 Appendix E: The 1992, 1996, 2000, and 2004 American National Election Studies
Chapter 13 Bibliography
Chapter 14 Index
Brewer's book is the best book written to date on the subject of public opinion and gay rights. Brewer combines sophisticated social research methods with a strong nose for politics. He situates his work nicely both in the enduring issues of American politics and in the unique characteristics of comemporary American politics. Written in a lucid and engaging style, this is a book that should appeal to a wide audience of readers. I think, for example, that it would fit very nicely into an undergraduate public opinion course as well as being of interest to academic specialists in the field.
— Ken Sherrill, Hunter College
This is an engaging book about an important topic in U.S. politics. In a clear and cogent manner, Paul Brewer discusses the interactive effect between public opinion and gay rights policymaking. Using a variety of data, including public opinion surveys, content analysis of media messages, and experimental design, he effectively accomplishes his task of showing that public opinion plays an important role in influencing the formulation of gay rights policies and that public debate helps determine the parameters of public opinion on gay rights.
— Susan Gluck Mezey, Loyola University, Chicago
Recommended. All levels / libraries.
— Choice Reviews, November 2008
In Value War, Paul Brewer brings together and extends the themes, data, and analysis from several of his published journal articles to create a book that is certainly more than the simple sum of its parts. Brewer's accessible text offers an excellent case study of public opinion, but it also provides a framework for examining the role of the media and political elites in public debates over issues like immigration, health care reform, stem cell reserach, or climate change....
— Political Communication, Winter 2010
This book takes on the long overdue task of carefully documenting and explaining the change in American public opinion on gay rights over the past thirty years. It will help readers better understand the nation's remarkable shift toward acceptance of homosexuality and the emerging sense among Americans that gays and lesbians deserve equal rights.
— Pat Egan, New York University
In Value War, Paul Brewer brings together and extends the themes, data, and analysis from several of his published journal articles to create a book that is certainly more than the simple sum of its parts.Brewer's accessible text offers an excellent case study of public opinion, but it also provides a framework for examining the role of the media and political elites in public debates over issues like immigration, health care reform, stem cell reserach, or climate change.
— Political Communication, Winter 2010