Knecht to Shed Light on Election Fallacies
By
黑料百科

, 黑料百科 associate professor of political science, examines the U.S. election process and voter鈥檚 misguided approach to the system in 鈥淵ou鈥檙e Voting Wrong! How Americans Get Elections Wrong and Why It Matters,鈥 on Monday, Oct. 15, at 7 p.m. at Kerrwood Hall in Hieronymus Lounge.
The Paul C. Wilt Phi Kappa Phi Faculty Lecture is free and open the public. , assistant professor of political science, and , professor of computer science, will respond to Knecht鈥檚 talk.
As the 2012 presidential election approaches, Americans鈥 confidence in government has never been lower, but Knecht says much of the blame is attributable to voters, not politicians. 鈥淭o view elections as a selection process means you believe a single vote might affect the outcome of an election,鈥 Knecht says. 鈥淚t won鈥檛. In fact, you have a greater chance of being struck by lightning on your way to the polling booth than your vote mattering in an instrumental sense. Instead of instrumental voting, I argue that voting only makes sense as an expressive act.
鈥淚 hope my talk will lead people to reevaluate their philosophy of voting and elections.鈥
Knecht, a Stanford graduate who earned a master鈥檚 degree and doctorate at UC Santa Barbara, has written a book, 鈥淧aying Attention to Foreign Affairs: How Public Opinion Affects Presidential Decision Making.鈥 He has also published research papers, 鈥淎 Pragmatic Response to an Unexpected Constraint: Problem Representation in a Complex Humanitarian Emergency鈥 to Foreign Policy Analysis, Vol. 5 and 鈥淗umanizing the Homeless: Does Contact Erode Stereotypes,鈥 for the journal Social Science Research. An article, 鈥淓ngaging the Reluctant? Service Learning, Interpersonal Contact and Attitudes Toward the Homeless,鈥 was recently published in the journal, PS: Political Science & Politics.
Filed under
Academics, Campus Events, Faculty and Staff, Lectures, Press Releases