Article published In: Journal of Asian Pacific Communication
Vol. 27:1 (2017) ► pp.22–42
The demobilizing potential of interpersonal conflict in the Pacific
The case of Guam
Published online: 23 May 2017
https://doi.org/10.1075/japc.27.1.02dal
https://doi.org/10.1075/japc.27.1.02dal
Abstract
Using the case of Guam, the present study examines the politically demobilizing potential of conflict avoidance in the Pacific. An analysis of data from a probability-based mail survey of registered voters (N = 319) in Guam revealed that conflict avoidance is inversely associated with political participation, civic engagement, and attention to interpersonal sources of information on a political issue. An inverse relationship between conflict avoidance and attention to the Internet as a source of information on a political issue was also approaching statistical significance. However, conflict avoidance was not associated with neighborliness. Implications are discussed.
Article outline
- Conflict avoidance
- Political participation, civic engagement, and neighborliness
- Attention to information sources regarding a political issue
- Method
- Sample and procedure
- Measures
- Conflict avoidance
- Political participation and civic engagement
- Neighborliness
- Attention to media and interpersonal sources regarding a political issue
- Controls
- Results
- Discussion
- Limitations, directions for future research, and conclusion
- Notes
References
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