Excerpt from The Psychology of Citizenship
Government in this land of ours suffers continually because its machinery is not familiar to the average citizen. We have taken it for granted that every resident knows how his town is governed, but as a matter of fact he is not well posted. The same statement can be made regarding federal and state government. Professor Weeks raises some interesting points about the need of publicity in government. To him the social order is largely a product of suggestion, and the problem of how to make the people understand good government is based, first, upon a knowledge of the mind of the citizen, and, second, upon the greatest of publicity about government. This book is full of rich suggestion that ought to have some influence in opening a new approach to the ideals of government.
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