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  • State of the field: What can political ethnography tell us about anti-politics and democratic disaffection?

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    CORBETT224749.pdf (330.1Kb)
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    Accepted Manuscript (AM)
    Author(s)
    Boswell, J
    Corbett, J
    Dommett, K
    Jennings, W
    Flinders, M
    Rhodes, RAW
    Wood, M
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Corbett, Jack
    Year published
    2019
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    Abstract
    This article adopts and reinvents the ethnographic approach to uncover what governing elites do, and how they respond to public disaffection. Although there is significant work on the citizens’ attitudes to the governing elite (the demand side) there is little work on how elites interpret and respond to public disaffection (the supply side). It is argued here that ethnography is the best available research method for collecting data on the supply side. The article tackles longstanding stereotypes in political science about the ethnographic method and what it is good for, and highlights how the innovative and varied practices ...
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    This article adopts and reinvents the ethnographic approach to uncover what governing elites do, and how they respond to public disaffection. Although there is significant work on the citizens’ attitudes to the governing elite (the demand side) there is little work on how elites interpret and respond to public disaffection (the supply side). It is argued here that ethnography is the best available research method for collecting data on the supply side. The article tackles longstanding stereotypes in political science about the ethnographic method and what it is good for, and highlights how the innovative and varied practices of contemporary ethnography are ideally suited to shedding light into the ‘black box’ of elite politics. The potential pay-off is demonstrated with reference to important examples of elite ethnography from the margins of political science scholarship. The implications from these rich studies suggest a reorientation of how one understands the drivers of public disaffection and the role that political elites play in exacerbating cynicism and disappointment. The article concludes by pointing to the benefits to the discipline in embracing elite ethnography both to diversify the methodological toolkit in explaining the complex dynamics of disaffection, and to better enable engagement in renewed public debate about the political establishment.
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    Journal Title
    European Journal of Political Research
    Volume
    58
    Issue
    1
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6765.12270
    Copyright Statement
    © 2019 Springer US. This is an electronic version of an article published in American Journal of Community Psychology, Volume 58, Issue 1. American Journal of Community Psychology is available online at: http://link.springer.com/ with the open URL of your article.
    Subject
    Political science
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/385658
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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