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Joanna
Everitt
Joanna Everitt
(Ph.D. Toronto) is interested in Canadian politics, gender and politics,
political communication, media, political behaviour, and public
opinion and voting. Her research examines gender differences in
public opinion, and the impact that media coverage has on assessments
of male and female party leaders and other aspects of voting behaviour.
More recently she has written on interest groups and voluntary organizations
and their relationships with Canadian democracy. She teaches political
science at the University of New Brunswick in Saint John and is
affiliated with the Information and Communication Studies and Gender
Studies programs. View
Curriculum Vitae
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Citizen
Politics: Research and Theory in Canadian Political Behaviour
Joanna Everitt and Brenda O'Neill (2002)
The study of political behaviour in Canada has often focused
largely on parties and voting; Citizen Politics seeks
to expand that definition of political behaviour to encompass
behaviouralsim as a method of inquiry, as well as a focus
of inquiry which includes; political culture, public opinion,
voting and elections, political participation, leaders and
activists, and interest groups and social movements. In the
past fifteen years since a Canadian political behaviour text
was last published, the field has changed immensely, and this
collection reflects these changes. Women are examined as independent
political actors, the importance of the media to voting and
elections is investigated; the uniqueness of immigrant and
ethnic minority participation in Canadian politics is discussed,
and new social movements are examined.
Each
section begins with an essay that synthesizes the important
research and arguments that inform each subfield. These are
followed by two or more essays of original, contemporary research
which inform students of critical new approaches and provide
examples of how research in the field of political behaviour
is conducted. The editors, Joanna Everitt and Brenda O'Neill,
begin the volume with an essay that discusses what political
behaviour is, how the study is done, and why it is important
as a field of study, and they end the book with an examination
of the state of the field in Canada today and an assessment
of tomorrow's challenges.
(Don
Mills: Oxford University Press)
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Advocacy
Groups: A Democratic Audit
Lisa Young and Joanna Everitt(forthcoming)
This
book uses the concepts of participation, inclusion and responsiveness
to examine advocacy groups in Canada and assess the ways that
they contribute to, or detract from, Canadian democracy. It
argues that group activity represents an important form of
political participation and that despite the fact that some
interests face greater organizational challenges than others,
advocacy groups can play critical compensatory roles for interests
that are often unrepresented in traditional political institutions.
It also finds that while Canadian advocacy groups employ a
wide range of strategies to draw attention to their concerns,
those with greater financial resources generally have greater
access to government decision makers. This has been accentuated
by recent trends in the reduction of government funding to
advocacy groups. The book concludes with several recommendations
for "best practices" that groups can follow in their
internal organization and efforts to influence public policy
and for actions that governments can take to engage in constructive
consultation with groups and to create an environment that
fosters desirable qualities in group activity.
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