Media Architects
The Socializers
Democratic Dreamers
Modern Disrupters
Definitions & Critiques
100

This sociologist is credited with the concept of "liquid" communication, which describes the fluid and unstable nature of modern digital interactions.

Zygmunt Bauman

100

He documented the "Benevolent Leader" imagery in children before the decline in presidential trust.

Fred Greenstein

100

He advocated for popular sovereignty based on the "General Will" rather than the "Will of All."

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

100

She examined whether the internet fulfills conditions of a Habermasian public sphere.

Zizi Papacharissi

100

This world leader famously claimed there is no such thing as public opinion, only "published opinion."

Winston Churchill

200

He studied WWI propaganda and described messages as being "injected" via the Hypodermic Needle.

Harold Lasswell

200

She coined the term "Intersectionality" to describe overlapping systems of oppression.

Kimberlé Crenshaw

200

In Federalist No. 10, he argued that a republic "refines and enlarges" public views via a chosen body.

James Madison

200

She developed the "Spiral of Silence" theory regarding the fear of social isolation.

Elisabeth Noelle-Neumann

200

He is the key theorist behind the 1962 concept of the "Public Sphere" as a space for rational debate.

Jürgen Habermas

300

This duo conducted the 1968 Chapel Hill study that provided empirical proof for Agenda Setting.

McCombs & Shaw

300

This duo's 1965 panel study remains the cornerstone for research on parent-child partisan transmission.

 Jennings and Niemi

300

He viewed the public's primary role as simply producing a government through competitive elections.

Joseph Schumpeter

300

This duo developed the Gender Realignment Theory to explain shifting female voting patterns.

Inglehart & Norris

300

This feminist scholar offered a critique of Habermas by introducing the concept of "Counterpublics."

 Nancy Fraser

400

This trio conducted the 1944 study The People's Choice, establishing the "Minimal Effects" theory

Lazarsfeld, Berelson & Gaudet

400

These two scholars are responsible for the "Impressionable Years" hypothesis (ages 18–25).

 Krosnick & Alwin

400

He argued that citizens are only "apathetic because they are powerless," not by choice.

Benjamin Barber

400

This sociologist used the term "Liquid" to describe the fluid and unstable nature of digital communication.

Zygmunt Bauman

400

This scholar argues that modern public opinion is found in "textured talk" on social media platforms.

Susan Herbst

500

This trio conducted the experimental study proving framing effects using news stories about a KKK rally.

Nelson, Clawson & Oxley

500

This trio conducted biological research suggesting political ideology has a 40% heritability rate.

Alford, Funk, and Hibbing.

500

He famously critiqued the interest group system, noting its "strong upper-class accent."

E.E. Schattschneider.

500

This duo identified the three specific criteria (facticity, intent, and format) that define "Fake News."

Egelhofer and Lecheler.

500

This researcher finds public opinion in face-to-face conversations where citizens use social identities.

 Katherine Cramer.