Interviewing Southern Politicians
- 1 December 1950
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 44 (4) , 886-896
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1951289
Abstract
This is a report on the interviews used in preparing Southern Politics in State and Nation. The book, by V. O. Key, Jr., resulted from a study carried on over a three year period at the Bureau of Public Administration of the University of Alabama. Roscoe C. Martin, then director of the Bureau, originated the project, obtained support for it from the Rockefeller Foundation and gave it general supervision.Mr. Key was assisted by several persons, including this writer. He directed a large share of the project's resources to the task of interviewing participants in southern politics. Forty per cent of the budget was allocated for the salaries and expenses of the two interviewers and for transcribing their reports. Thirty per cent of the time of the senior staff members and twenty per cent of the total time of the whole staff was spent in the field. The decision to devote this large amount of time and money to interviewing rested on the conviction that much significant political information could be obtained only from politicians themselves or from their close associates. It rested also on the belief that accurate observation would eliminate the need for conjecture about many political phenomena.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Use of Interviewer Rapport as a Method of Detecting Differences Between “Public” and “Private” OpinionThe Journal of Social Psychology, 1945
- Gauging Public OpinionPublished by Walter de Gruyter GmbH ,1944