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ISBN 10: 0199604452
ISBN 13: 978-0199604456
Author: Robert E. Goodin
Drawing on the rich resources of the ten-volume series of The Oxford Handbooks of Political Science, this one-volume distillation provides a comprehensive overview of all the main branches of contemporary political science: political theory; political institutions; political behavior; comparative politics; international relations; political economy; law and politics; public policy; contextual political analysis; and political methodology. Sixty-seven of the top political scientists worldwide survey recent developments in those fields and provide penetrating introductions to exciting new fields of study. Following in the footsteps of the New Handbook of Political Science edited by Robert Goodin and Hans-Dieter Klingemann a decade before, this Oxford Handbook of Political Science will become an indispensable guide to the scope and methods of political science as a whole. It will serve as the reference book of record for political scientists and for those following their work for years to come.
The Oxford handbook of political science 1st Table of contents:
PART I: INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER 1 THE STATE OF THE DISCIPLINE, THE DISCIPLINE OF THE STATE
1 THE DISCIPLINE
2 WHERE WE’RE AT
3 WHAT NEXT?
4 DISCIPLINES WE HAVE KNOWN
APPENDICES
REFERENCES
PART II: POLITICAL THEORY
CHAPTER 2 OVERVIEW OF POLITICAL THEORY
1 WHAT IS POLITICAL THEORY?
2 CONTEMPORARY THEMES AND DEVELOPMENTS
3 POLITICAL THEORY AND THE GLOBAL TURN
4 POLITICAL THEORY AND POLITICAL SCIENCE: CURRENT TRAJECTORIES
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 3 NORMATIVE METHODOLOGY
1 SELF-INTEREST
2 THREE SCHOOLS OF SOCIAL THEORY
3 SHARED VALUES
4 A FOURTH THEORY: COORDINATION
5 CONCLUDING REMARKS
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 4 THEORY IN HISTORY
1 THE PROBLEMS OF TERMINOLOGY
2 HISTORY AND THEORY: THE ENCOUNTER
3 HISTORIES AND THEIR PURPOSE
4 THE ENCOUNTER RESUMED
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 5 JUSTICE AFTER RAWLS
1 RAWLS’S THEORY OF JUSTICE IN A NUTSHELL
2 CRITICISMS AND ALTERNATIVE PATHS
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 6 MODERNITY AND ITS CRITICS
1 DISENCHANTMENT AND THE PROBLEM OF MEANINGLESSNESS
2 COMMODITY FETISHISM
3 IDEOLOGY CRITIQUE
4 NATURE
REFERENCES
PART III: POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS
CHAPTER 7 OLD INSTITUTIONALISMS: AN OVERVIEW
1 INTRODUCTION
2 TRADITIONS IN THE STUDY OF POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS
3 WHERE ARE WE NOW—MODERNIST-EMPIRICISM?
4 WHERE DID WE COME FROM—FORMAL-LEGAL ANALYSIS?
5 WHAT ARE THE COMPETING TRADITIONS—IDEALISM?
6 WHAT ARE THE COMPETING TRADITIONS—SOCIALISM?
7 CONCLUSIONS
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 8 ELABORATING THE “NEW INSTITUTIONALISM”
1 AN INSTITUTIONAL PERSPECTIVE
2 THEORIZING POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS
3 INSTITUTIONAL IMPACTS ON POLITICAL ACTORS AND OUTCOMES
4 INSTITUTIONAL ORDER AND CHANGE
5 THE FRONTIER OF INSTITUTIONALISM
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 9 COMPARATIVE CONSTITUTIONS
1 INTRODUCTION
2 ORIGINS AND EVOLUTION OF CONSTITUTIONAL MODELS
3 CONSTITUTIONAL REGIME TYPOLOGIES
4 CONSTITUTIONAL CONSEQUENCES
5 CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 10 POLITICAL PARTIES IN AND OUT OF LEGISLATURES
1 POLITICAL PARTIES AS INSTITUTIONS
2 PARTY SYSTEMS
3 THE PARTY OUTSIDE THE LEGISLATURE
4 THE PARTY INSIDE THE LEGISLATURE
5 CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 11 THE REGULATORY STATE?
1 REGULATION AND GOVERNANCE
2 THE RISE OF REGULATORY STUDIES
3 THE RISE OF THE REGULATORY STATE?
4 THE POLICE ECONOMY
5 THE UNREGULABLE LIBERAL ECONOMY
6 THE UNREGULABLE LIBERAL ECONOMY CREATES THE PROVIDER STATE
7 REGULATION CREATES BIG BUSINESS
8 ANTITRUST GLOBALIZES AMERICAN MEGA-CORPORATE CAPITALISM
9 MEGA-CORPORATE CAPITALISM CREATES REGULATORY CAPITALISM
10 THE REGULATED STATE
11 CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
PART IV: LAW AND POLITICS
CHAPTER 12 OVERVIEW OF LAW AND POLITICS: THE STUDY OF LAW AND POLITICS
1 THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE STUDY OF LAW AND POLITICS
2 THE STRUCTURE OF THE FIELD
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 13 THE JUDICIALIZATION OF POLITICS
1 WHAT IS THE JUDICIALIZATION OF POLITICS?
2 A NEW FRONTIER: THE JUDICIALIZATION OF “MEGA-POLITICS”
3 WHY THE JUDICIALIZATION OF POLITICS?
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 14 JUDICIAL BEHAVIOR
1 MODELING LAW
2 ATTITUDES
3 SEPARATION OF POWERS
4 CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
CASES
CHAPTER 15 LAW AND SOCIETY
1 KEY CHARACTERISTICS
2 MAJOR CONTRIBUTIONS TO LAW AND SOCIETY SCHOLARSHIP
3 RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 16 FEMINIST THEORY AND THE LAW
1 THE PREMISE AND PRESENCE OF BIAS
2 FEMINIST JURISPRUDENCE AND GENDERED REALITY
3 FEMINIST LEGAL REASONING
4 FROM THE “WOMAN QUESTION” TO “WOMAN ANSWERS”
5 CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
CASES
PART V: POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
CHAPTER 17 OVERVIEW OF POLITICAL BEHAVIOR: POLITICAL BEHAVIOR AND CITIZEN POLITICS
1 THE NATURE OF MASS BELIEF SYSTEMS
2 MODERNIZATION AND DEMOCRATIZATION
3 ELECTORAL BEHAVIOR
4 POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
5 DOES PUBLIC OPINION MATTER
6 CHANGING PUBLICS: A CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 18 POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY AND CHOICE
1 THE ROLE OF EMOTION IN POLITICAL CHOICE
2 THE PSYCHOLOGY OF BIASED PROCESSING
3 BEYOND SELF-REPORT: NEW SOURCES OF THEORY AND EVIDENCE
4 INFORMATION AS THE GOLD STANDARD
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 19 VOTERS AND PARTIES
1 REALIGNMENT OR DEALIGNMENT IN THE PARTY–VOTER NEXUS
2 CHANGES IN THE POLICY PREFERENCES OF VOTERS
3 ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGES TO THE PARTY–VOTER LINKAGE
4 ELECTORAL COMPETITION, ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGE, AND THE PERFORMANCE OF TRADITIONAL PARTIES
5 CONCLUSIONS
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 20 COMPARATIVE LEGISLATIVE BEHAVIOR
1 INSTITUTIONAL INFLUENCES ON PARTISANSHIP IN LEGISLATURES
2 THE BEHAVIORAL FOUNDATIONS OF PARTISANSHIP
3 THE RISE AND FALL IN PARTISANSHIP: INSTITUTIONAL AND BEHAVIORAL EXPLANATIONS
4 CONSEQUENCES OF CHANGES IN PARTISANSHIP
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 21 POLITICAL INTOLERANCE IN THE CONTEXT OF DEMOCRATIC THEORY
1 THE ROLE OF TOLERANCE IN DEMOCRATIC THEORY
2 WHAT CAUSES SOME CITIZENS TO BE TOLERANT BUT OTHERS NOT?
3 WHAT ARE THE CONSEQUENCES OF MASS POLITICAL INTOLERANCE?
4 CONCLUDING COMMENTS
REFERENCES
PART VI: CONTEXTUAL POLITICAL ANALYSIS
CHAPTER 22 OVERVIEW OF CONTEXTUAL POLITICAL ANALYSIS
1 OVERTURE
2 CONTEXT MATTERS
3 THE NATURE OF SOCIAL EXPLANATION
4 CONTEXT AS PIECES OF A PUZZLE
5 CONTEXT IN ITS PLACE
6 STRUCTURING THE SUBJECT
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 23 POLITICAL ONTOLOGY
1 POLITICAL ONTOLOGY: WHAT IS IT?
2 … AND WHY IS IT IMPORTANT?
3 THE STATUS OF ONTOLOGICAL CLAIMS
4 ONTOLOGICAL DISPUTES IN POLITICAL ANALYSIS
5 CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 24 THE LOGIC OF APPROPRIATENESS
1 THE BASIC IDEAS
2 THE SETTING: INSTITUTIONS OF DEMOCRATIC GOVERNANCE
3 RULES OF APPROPRIATENESS IN ACTION
4 THE DYNAMICS OF RULES of APPROPRIATENESS
5 RECONCILING LOGICS OF ACTION
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 25 WHY AND HOW: PLACE MATTERS
1 PLACE AND POLITICS
2 THE PLACE, THE UNIVERSE, AND THE GLOBE
3 PLACE AND SOCIAL ACTION
4 PLACES IN HISTORY AND TODAY
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 26 WHY AND HOW HISTORY MATTERS
1 WHY HISTORY MATTERS
2 HISTORY AND PROCESSES OF STATE TRANSFORMATION
3 SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AS POLITICAL INNOVATIONS
4 SOCIAL MOVEMENTS IN HISTORY
5 CONCLUDING REFLECTIONS
REFERENCES
PART VII: COMPARATIVE POLITICS
CHAPTER 27 OVERVIEW OF COMPARATIVE POLITICS
1 COMPARATIVE POLITICS AS (EMPIRICAL) POLITICAL SCIENCE
2 STATES, STATE FORMATION, AND POLITICAL CONSENT
3 POLITICAL REGIMES AND TRANSITIONS
4 POLITICAL INSTABILITY, POLITICAL CONFLICT
5 MASS POLITICAL MOBILIZATION
6 PROCESSING POLITICAL DEMANDS
7 GOVERNANCE IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
8 THEORY AND METHODS
9 LOOKING AHEAD
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 28 WAR, TRADE, AND STATE FORMATION
1 INTRODUCTION
2 CAUSAL DYNAMICS OF STATE FORMATION
3 DIVERSITY AND SELECTION
4 STATE FORMATION AND REGIME TYPE
5 STATE FORMATION AND STATE FAILURE IN THE MODERN ERA
6 INSTITUTIONAL LEGACIES OF EMPIRE
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 29 WHAT CAUSES DEMOCRATIZATION
1 INVESTIGATING THE PROCESS: WHAT CAUSES THE CORRELATION BETWEEN DEVELOPMENT AND DEMOCRACY
2 MODELS OF DEMOCRATIZATION AS STRATEGIC INTERACTIONS BETWEEN ELITES AND CITIZENS
3 DISAGGREGATING DEMOCRATIZATION
4 CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 30 PARTY SYSTEMS
1 THE CONCEPT OF PARTY SYSTEM
2 VARIETIES OF PARTY SYSTEMS
3 COMPARATIVE STATICS: STRATEGIC CHOICE IN PARTY SYSTEMS
4 HISTORICAL DYNAMICS OF PARTY SYSTEMS
5 CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 31 POLITICAL CLIENTELISM
1 DEFINITIONS
2 TWO WAVES OF STUDIES OF CLIENTELISM
3 CLIENTELISM AND COMMITMENT
4 ARE CLIENTS CORE SUPPORTERS OR SWING VOTERS?
5 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES
6 CONCLUSIONS
REFERENCES
PART VIII: INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
CHAPTER 32 OVERVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: BETWEEN UTOPIA AND REALITY
1 OUR APPROACH
2 THEPRIZING IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
3 THE EMPIRICAL AND NORMATIVE FACES OF THEORY
4 THE QUESTION OF PROGRESS
5 CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 33 THE NEW LIBERALISM
1 CORE ASSUMPTIONS OF LIBERAL THEORY
2 THEORETICAL VARIANTS OF LIBERALISM
3 BROADER IMPLICATIONS OF LIBERAL INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THEORY
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 34 THE ENGLISH SCHOOL
1 CONTEXT AND EMERGENCE
2 INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY: BETWEEN SYSTEM AND WORLD SOCIETY
3 THE ENGLISH SCHOOL AND ITS CRITICS
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 35 FROM INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS TO GLOBAL SOCIETY
1 GOING GLOBAL
2 THE WHAT, WHO, HOW, AND WHY OF GLOBAL SOCIETY
3 CONCLUSION: FROM ANARCHY TO GLOBAL GOVERNANCE?
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 36 BIG QUESTIONS IN THE STUDY OF WORLD POLITICS
1 SIX BIG QUESTIONS ABOUT CHANGE OVER TIME
2 ISSUES OF INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 37 SIX WISHES FOR A MORE RELEVANT DISCIPLINE OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
1 HOW SHOULD INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS DEVELOP OVER THE NEXT TWENTY YEARS?
2 WHERE SHOULD THE FIELD BE GOING?
REFERENCES
PART IX: POLITICAL ECONOMY
CHAPTER 38 OVERVIEW OF POLITICAL ECONOMY: THE REACH OF POLITICAL ECONOMY
1 ENDOGENOUS INSTITUTIONS: THE STFUCTURE OF CONGRESS
2 REVELATION AND AGGREGATION ORINFORMATION: VOTING
3 EVOLUTIONARY MODELS OF HUMAN AND POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
4 PUHING THE ENVELOPE OF INVESTIGATION
5 THE INTELLECTUAL ARMS RACE
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 39 ECONOMIC METHODS IN POSITIVE POLITICAL THEORY
1 INTRODUCTION
2 TWO APPROCHES FROM ECONOMICS
3 TWO ANALYTICAL CHARACTERISTICS
4 CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 40 CAPITALISM AND DEMOCRACY
1 INTRODUCTION
2 PRECURSORS FOR THE CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE
3 DEMOCRACY AND PARTISANSHIP
4 MULTIPLE DIMENSIONS AND COALITIONAL POLITICS
5 DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS
6 VARITIES OF CAPITALISM
7 CONCLUSION: TOWARDS A NEW STRUCTURALISM?
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 41 POLITICS, DELEGATION, AND BUREAUCRACY
1 CORE ARGUMENTS ABOUT DELEGATION STRATEGIES
2 EMPIRICAL TESTS OF THE FOUR ARGUMENTS
3 IMPLICATIONS OF THE FORMAL AND EMPIRICAL WORK ON THE FOUR ARGUMENTS
4 THEORETIVAL ROBUSTNRSS: HOW FRAGILE ARE THE ARGUMENTS
5 CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 42 THE EVOLUTIONARY BASIS OF COLLECTIVE ACTION
INTRODUCTION
2 THE COOPERATIVE SPECIES
3 MUTUALISTIC COOPERATION
4 STRONG RECIPROCITY: EVIDENCE FROM BEHAVIORAL EXPERIMENTS
5 THE EVOLUTION OF STRONG RECIPROCITY
6 PROXIMATE MOTIVES: INTERNALIZED NORMS AND SOCIAL EMOTIONS
7 CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
PART X: PUBLIC POLICY
CHAPTER 43 OVERVIEW OF PUBLIC POLICY: THE PUBLIC AND ITS POLICIES
1 POLICY PERSUASION
2 ARGUING VERSUS BARGAINING
3 NETWORKED GOVERNANCE
4 ROWING VERSUS STEERING
5 POLICY, PRACTICE, AND PERSUATION
6 POLICY AS ITS OWN CAUSE
7 CONSTRAINTS
8 CHANGE, CONSTARINTAND, DEMOCRATIC POLITICS
9 PUZZLES, PROBLEMS, AND PERSUASION
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 44 SOCIAL AND CULTURAL FACTORS CONSTRAINING AND ENABLING
1 INTRODUCTION
2 SOME INTELLECTUAL HISTORY
3 COMING TO TERMS WITH VARIETY
4 FINDING VARIETY
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 45 POLICY DYNAMICS
1 OVERVIEW
2 “SYSTEMS” and “DYNAMICS”
3 NEGATIVE FEEDBACK PROCESSES: THE BALANCING OF POWER
4 POSITIVE FEEDBACK PROCESSES: ENDOGENOUS DEVELOPMENTS
5 DYNAMICS WITHOUT FEEDBACK LOOPS
6 FUTURE RESEARCH
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 46 REFRAMING PROBLEMATIC POLICIES
1 PROBLEMATIC ENDS: SIX EXAMPLES
2 INSTITUTIONAL STRUGGLES TO DEAL WITH PROBLEMATIC ENDS
3 SECONDARY REFRAMING: THE CASE OF OFFLOADING UNWANTED CLIENTS
4 CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 47 REFLECTIONS ON POLICY ANALYSIS PUTTING IT TOGETHER AGAIN
1 THE DOUBLE IMPERATIVE
2 THE POLICY PORTFOLIO
3 THE HISTORICAL DIMENSION
4 THE COMPARATIVE DIMENSION
5 THE CASE FOR ECLECTICISM
APPENDIX 44.1 THE QUEEN’S SPEECH, NOVEMBER 2004 THE UK GOVERNAMENT’S LEGISLATIVE PROGRAMME
APPENDIX 44.2 BUSH’S 2004 STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS
REFERENCES
PART XI: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
CHAPTER 48 OVERVIEW OF POLITICAL METHODOLOGY: POST-BEHAVIORAL MOVEMENTS AND TRENDS
1 OVERVIEW
2 CONCEPTUALIZATION AND MEASUREMENT
3 CAUSAL THINKING
4 THE FUTURE
REFERENCE
CHAPTER 49 CAUSATION AND EXPLANATION IN SOCIAL SCIENCE
1 CAUSALITY
2 COUNTERFACTUALS
3 EXPLORING THREE BASIC QUESTIONS ABOUT CAUSALITY
4 THE HUMEAN AND NEO-HUMEAN APPROACH TO CAUSATION
5 COUNTERFACTUAL DEFINITION OF CAUSATION
6 EXPERIMENTATION AND THE MANIPULATION APPROACH TO CAUSATION
7 PRE-EMPTION AND THE MECHANISM APPROACH TO CAUSATION
8 FOUR APPROACHES TO CAUSALITY
9 GOING BEYOND THE NEYMAN–RUBIN–HOLLAND CONDITIONS FOR CAUSATION
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 50 FIELD EXPERIMENTS AND NATURAL EXPERIMENTS
1 DEFINITION OF FIELD EXPERIMENTATION
2 GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF FIELD EXPERIMENTATION
3 EXPERIMENTS AND INFERENCE
4 CONTRASTING EXPERIMENTAL AND OBSERVATIONAL INFERENCE
5 NONCOMPLIANCE
6 ATTRTION
7 NATURAL EXPERIMENTS AND DISCONTINUITY DESIGNS
8 ASSORTED METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES IN THE DESIGN AND ANALYSIS OF EXPERIMENTS
9 METHODOLOGICAL VALUE OF EXPERIMENTS
RERENCES
CHAPTER 51 THE CASE STUDY: WHAT IT IS AND WHAT IT DOES
1 DEFINITIONS
2 WHAT IS A CASE STUDY GOOD FOR? CASE STUDY VERSUS CROSS-CASE ANALYSIS
3 HYPOTHESIS: GENERATING VERSUS TESTING
4 VALIDITY: INTERNAL VERSUS EXTERNAL
5 CAUSAL INSIGHT: CAUSAL MECHANISMS VERSUS CAUSAL EFFECTS
6 SCOPE OF PROPOSITION: DEEP VERSUS BROAD
7 THE POPULATION OF CASES: HETEROGENEOUS VERSUS HOMOGENEOUS
8 CAUSAL STRENGTH: STRONG VERSUS WEAK
9 USEFUL VARIATION: RARE VERSUS COMMON
10 DATA AVAILABILITY: CONCENTRATED VERSUS DISPERSED
11 CONCLUSIONS
REFERENCES
CHAPTER 52 INTEGRATING QUALITATIVE AND QUANTITATIVE METHODS
1 STATISTICAL RESULTS
2 CHOOSING NARRATIVES
3 STRUCTURING THE NARRATIVES
4 THE INCOMPLETENESS OF STATISTICAL MODELS
5 LEARNING FROM THE NARRATIVES
6 CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
APPENDIX
POLITICAL THEORY
POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS
LAW AND POLITICS
POLITICAL BEHAVIOR
CONTEXTUAL POLITICAL ANALYSIS
COMPARATIVE POLITICS
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
POLITICAL ECONOMY
PUBLIC POLICY
POLITICAL METHODOLOGY
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