Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Political_capital> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 41 of
41
with 100 triples per page.
- Political_capital abstract "Political capital refers to the trust, goodwill, and influence a politician has with the public and other political figures. This goodwill is a type of invisible currency that politicians can use to mobilize the voting public or spend on policy reform. Some thinkers distinguish between reputational and representative political capital. Reputational capital refers to a politician’s credibility and reliability. This form of capital is accumulated by maintaining consistent policy positions and ideological views. Representative capital refers to a politician’s influence in policy-setting. This form of capital is accumulated through experience, seniority, and serving in leadership positions. Thus, political capital—reputational and representative—is the product of relationships between opinion (public impressions), policy (legislative rewards/penalties), and political judgement (prudent decision-making).".
- Political_capital wikiPageExternalLink balance-sheet-political-capital.
- Political_capital wikiPageID "185974".
- Political_capital wikiPageLength "3640".
- Political_capital wikiPageOutDegree "11".
- Political_capital wikiPageRevisionID "703848405".
- Political_capital wikiPageWikiLink Category:Government.
- Political_capital wikiPageWikiLink Category:Political_terminology.
- Political_capital wikiPageWikiLink Credibility.
- Political_capital wikiPageWikiLink Currency.
- Political_capital wikiPageWikiLink Diplomatic_capital.
- Political_capital wikiPageWikiLink George_W._Bush.
- Political_capital wikiPageWikiLink Mandate_(politics).
- Political_capital wikiPageWikiLink Politician.
- Political_capital wikiPageWikiLink Social_capital.
- Political_capital wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- Political_capital wikiPageWikiLink United_States_presidential_election,_2004.
- Political_capital wikiPageWikiLinkText "Capital".
- Political_capital wikiPageWikiLinkText "Political capital".
- Political_capital wikiPageWikiLinkText "capital".
- Political_capital wikiPageWikiLinkText "political capital".
- Political_capital wikiPageWikiLinkText "political".
- Political_capital wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_needed.
- Political_capital wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:For.
- Political_capital wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Poli-term-stub.
- Political_capital wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Portal.
- Political_capital wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refimprove.
- Political_capital wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Political_capital subject Category:Government.
- Political_capital subject Category:Political_terminology.
- Political_capital type Concept.
- Political_capital type Redirect.
- Political_capital comment "Political capital refers to the trust, goodwill, and influence a politician has with the public and other political figures. This goodwill is a type of invisible currency that politicians can use to mobilize the voting public or spend on policy reform. Some thinkers distinguish between reputational and representative political capital. Reputational capital refers to a politician’s credibility and reliability.".
- Political_capital label "Political capital".
- Political_capital sameAs Q7210259.
- Political_capital sameAs رأس_المال_السياسي.
- Political_capital sameAs m.019dwb.
- Political_capital sameAs Политический_капитал.
- Political_capital sameAs Q7210259.
- Political_capital wasDerivedFrom Political_capital?oldid=703848405.
- Political_capital isPrimaryTopicOf Political_capital.