Americans' Sense of Civic Duty Declining
Source: Connie Cass, "5 Things About Americans' Slipping Sense of Duty," Associated Press, December 29, 2014.
December 31, 2014
A new poll from the Associated Press and research company GfK reveals that Americans' attitudes toward civic duties are changing. The poll repeated questions from a 1984 University of Chicago poll, which surveyed Americans about their views on voting, volunteering, serving on a jury, reporting crime, speaking English and being informed. According to this year's poll:
- One-fourth of Americans under the age of 30 said that speaking English, volunteering or being informed about current events was not a civic duty.
- Young Americans felt most strongly about reporting crimes, with two-thirds calling it "very important." However, that is a drop from the 1984 poll when 86 percent of young Americans called crime reporting "very important."
- Less than one-third (28 percent) of respondents called volunteering a "very important obligation," compared to three-fourths of respondents who viewed voting that way.
- Americans under 30 considered volunteering more important than did their 1984 counterparts, with 29 percent calling volunteering "very important," compared to 19 percent in 1984.
- In 1984, 56 percent of Americans felt that keeping up with current events was very important; today, that figure is just 37 percent. One-fifth of respondents said there existed no civic obligation to be informed.
- Compared to the 1984 poll, respondents only ranked voting and volunteering as high as they did in the past. All other activities fell in importance compared to 30 years ago.
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