EXAM QUESTIONS & ANSWERS
|AGRADE
Characterize the range and types of political participation in the US. List the types that
are most and least frequent. - Answer- voting
talking about politics
joining civic or political organizations
attending public meetings
communicating with representatives
contributing resources
campaigning
initiating and repealing laws
seeking public office
Describe how and why political scientists often focus on one type of political
participation in their research. - Answer- focus on voting:
- key role in theories of democracy
- greatest form of participation
- lots of data availability
Compare and contrast referendum and initiative as forms of citizen involvement in law
making. List several pros and cons to these types of elections. - Answer- referendum:
when voters either approve or disapprove a certain act of their legislatures
initiative: residents propose changed or new laws and put them on the ballot, then pass
or defeat them without legislature or executive intervention
Discuss the range of voter turnout for presidential elections around the world and the
place that the US holds in rankings of that measure. - Answer- Turnout around the world
ranges from 98% (Rwanda) to 22% (Haiti) with the US having a 54% turnout (tied with
Nigeria, Zambia, and Austria)
, Describe the US national turnout during 1972-2012 in Presidential elections and in
gubernatorial and US House elections that are held in Presidential election years, as
well as those that occur between Presidential elections. Explain the differences. -
Answer- Turnout in general is higher in Presidential years than non-presidential years
Overall, turnout is less in 2012 than 1960, with a slight uptick in the later years
Characterize the turnout in Texas gubernatorial elections from 1970 to 2010 in
comparison to average state turnouts during those same years. - Answer- Turnout has
ranged from 10 to 18% in Texas, while the national average is 30-50%
Compare and contrast %VAP, %VEP, and %Registered as measures of voter turnout
with respect to size, accuracy, advantages, and disadvantages. - Answer- Voters
eligible is a smaller group than voting age, but they represent a higher percentage of the
national turnout.
Explain the range of state policies on whether and when convicted felons can vote.
Discuss why this is a partisan issue between the two political parties. - Answer- 11
states: may lose vote permanently
20 states: vote restored after term of incarceration, parole, and probation
4 states: vote restored after term of incarceration and parole
13 states: vote restored after term of incarceration
2 states: unrestricted
Characterize how Texas ranks in voter turnout from 1980-2010 and explain the periodic
movement that occurs in turnout measures over time. - Answer- Texas is at the bottom
of the pack
Describe how different voter turnout measures can be accidentally or intentionally
confusing and used to misrepresent changes in turnout over time. - Answer- the
denominator makes all the difference (larger denominator = smaller percentage)
therefore a larger base of people (ie: voting age) produces a smaller turnout percentage
than a smaller base of people (ie: registered voters).
based on this, politicians can use registered voter stats to inflate turnout, and VAP/VEP
to deflate turnout.
Why not always use registered voters stat and be done with it? - Answer- between state
comparisons can be off due to high variation in registration processes
voter registration rolls are sometimes bloated with previous voters