Studies based on two random-digit-dial samples (N = 538 and N = 632) of adu
lts in San Diego suggest that higher levels of declarative knowledge about
"mainstream" culture and politics in the United States are associated with
achieving and exercising power regardless of cultural background. Statistic
al relationships were examined among general mainstream societal Knowledge,
domain-specific political knowledge, the amount of reading reported, indic
ators of power (including occupational status, income, voting, communicatin
g about politics), and requisites of power (including perceptions of powerl
essness, political efficacy, and political interest). Extraneous cognitive-
processing variance was controlled by using simple checklists of declarativ
e knowledge. Although causality cannot be proven, the results suggest that
a person's content knowledge is related to reading and power, even when age
, education, gender, ethnicity, and measures of literacy practice are contr
olled. Thus, Knowledge is associated with power regardless of most barriers
that citizens otherwise face.