
Contents
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A Changing U.S. Social Environment A Changing U.S. Social Environment
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Changing Attitudes, Connectivity, and Well-Being Changing Attitudes, Connectivity, and Well-Being
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Liberal and Conservative Movements in Sociopolitical Attitudes Liberal and Conservative Movements in Sociopolitical Attitudes
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Trends in Confidence and Connections Trends in Confidence and Connections
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Stability and Change in Social Indicators Stability and Change in Social Indicators
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A Note on Accounts for Change A Note on Accounts for Change
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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References References
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Cite
Abstract
This book reports on social trends among U.S. adults between the early 1970s and the first decade of the 21st century. The chapters cover social and political phenomena arrayed across a wide spectrum. Some investigate and interpret changes in salient sociopolitical attitudes. Others ask whether confidence in major American institutions fell, or if connections to religious groups or other persons waned. Still others study shifts in how adults assessed their well-being as economic, political, and social conditions in U.S. society underwent sometimes-dramatic change. The 12 studies that follow rest on survey data assembled by the General Social Survey (GSS) project since 1972. This introductory chapter first provides context for these studies, drawing on prior research about change in the U.S. social, political, and economic landscape since the 1970s. Next comes an overview of this book's content, including some remarks about related GSS-based trend studies on other topics. It closes by briefly calling attention to the variety of approaches and explanations that the authors use when offering accounts for the patterns of change they report.
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