URAG Working Paper #03-04
The Dual Roots of Opinion Leadership (pdf)
by Christine H. Roch, American
Journal of Political Science, forthcoming.
Political scientists often focus on the link between personal attributes
and the flow of political information. In this paper, I argue that opinion-leadership
may not be as singularly rooted in the presence of a certain predisposition
or set of personal characteristics as suggested in previous political
opinion leadership studies. I develop two sets of hypotheses: the first
derived from the perspective that opinion leadership is a function of
a recipe of attributes, and the second derived from the perspective that
opinion leadership is tied to the characteristics of the social milieu
in which the citizen is embedded. I test these hypotheses empirically
using a data set constructed from two surveys of individuals in the New
York metropolitan area. The results suggest that while opinion leaders
possess attributes that distinguish them from non-leaders, they appear
to gain influence through their informational advantages relative to others
in the same environment.
Comments and questions regarding this paper may be directed to Christine
H. Roch.
|