Comparative Politics

Höfundur Mark Irving Lichbach; Alan S. Zuckerman

Útgefandi Cambridge University Press

Snið Page Fidelity

Print ISBN 9780521885157

Útgáfa 2

Útgáfuár

5.090 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Cover
  • Half-title
  • Series-title
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Contributors
  • Preface and Acknowledgments
  • 1 Paradigms and Pragmatism: Comparative Politics during the Past Decade
  • Introduction
  • The chapters
  • The Messy Center: Big-Picture Pragmatism
  • Pushing against the Mainstream: Culture and Constructivism
  • Fortifying the Center: Research Paradigms and Causal Analysis
  • Fortifying the Center: Linking Structure and Action and Exploring Causal Patterns
  • The Future of the Center: Constructivism and Causality
  • Final words
  • 2 Thinking and Working in the Midst of Things: Discovery, Explanation, and Evidence in Comparative P
  • Introduction
  • Claim: Comparative Politics as Chemistry and Physics
  • Counterclaim: Comparative Politics as Literature and Art
  • Origins of the present crisis of understanding
  • The First Attempt to Creatively Deepen Variable Analysis Was the Search for Paradigms
  • Discover a difficulty
  • Discovery = Big Problems
  • Discovery = Thorny Puzzles
  • Discovery = Core Difficulty
  • Suggest an explanation
  • Explanation = Big Concepts
  • Explanation = Mechanisms
  • Explanation = Institutions
  • Explanation = Middle-Range Causal Arguments
  • Provide some evidence
  • Evidence = Stylized Facts
  • Evidence = Designs for Establishing Causality
  • Evidence = Analytic Narratives
  • Multiple Paradigms: Deadening Metaphysics or Vitalizing Frictions?
  • Deadening Metaphysics
  • Vitalizing Frictions
  • Comparative comparativists: paradigmatic and pragmatic
  • 3 Advancing Explanation in Comparative Politics: Social Mechanisms, Endogenous Processes, and Empiri
  • Explanations in comparative politics
  • Explanations with social mechanisms
  • From optimization and selfishness to bounded rationality, heuristics, and social learning
  • From exogenous to endogenous preferences and identities
  • Social learning as an instrumental choice and as a social process
  • Social mechanisms in recent research in comparative politics: partisanship and voting
  • Social mechanisms in recent research in comparative politics: political violence
  • Applying social mechanisms in empirical analysis
  • An application to partisanship
  • An application to political violence
  • Social mechanisms and rigorous empirical analysis in alternative modes of explanation in comparative
  • Conclusions and implications
  • 4 Strong Theory, Complex History: Structure and Configuration in Comparative Politics Revisited
  • I
  • II
  • III
  • IV
  • 5 Reconsiderations of Rational Choice in Comparative and Historical Analysis
  • A methodologial shift
  • The model of rational choice: Neither neoclassical economics nor public choice
  • Influences
  • Comparative and Historical Rational Choice
  • The limits and possibilities of comparative rational choice
  • Reconsidering the Behavioral Assumption
  • Power
  • Conclusion
  • 6 Culture in Comparative Political Analysis
  • Introduction
  • Culture and cultural analyses of politics
  • The centrality of psychocultural narratives and interpretations in cultural analyses of politics
  • Psychocultural Narratives and Interpretations
  • Cultural Expressions and Enactments
  • Interpretations and Narratives as Methodological Tools
  • Two Examples
  • Critique of cultural analyses of politics
  • Unit-of-Analysis Issues
  • Within-Culture Variation Can Be Substantial
  • Distinguishing Culture from Other Concepts
  • Culture and Change
  • Mechanisms Underlying Cultural Explanations
  • Cultural Explanations Are “Just-So” Stories and Not Causal Accounts
  • Conclusion: Linking culture to choice and institutions
  • 7 Researching the State
  • Introduction
  • The difficulty in comparing states
  • Image and practices: the tension of a singular template and multiple dynamics
  • The Image of the State: The Two Faces of Domination and Allegiance
  • The Practices of the State: The Growing Diversity of States in the Twentieth Century
  • New approaches to the comparative study of states
  • Political Trajectories
  • Integrated Comparative Analysis
  • Toward a multilayered, multiparadigm analysis of states
  • 8 An Approach to Comparative Analysis or a Subfield within a Subfield?: Political Economy
  • Introduction – and a few caveats
  • Political economy: what it was and how it (unexpectedly) came about
  • The (Unexpected) Rebirth of Political Economy
  • Interests, institutions, and ideas as explanatory alternatives
  • Concepts and Questions
  • Interest-Based Political Economy: Origins
  • Institutional Political Economy: Origins
  • Constructivist Political Economy: Origins
  • Extensions of interest-based political economy
  • Trade, Mobility, and Politics
  • Assets, Skills, and Compensation
  • Interest-Based Theories: Strengths and Weaknesses
  • Developments in institutional political economy
  • Chosen Structures That Structure Choices?
  • Non-Game-Theoretic Extensions: The Developmental State Literature
  • Institutionalist political economy: strengths and weaknesses
  • Beyond coalitions and institutions: ideational political economy
  • Ideas as Resources and Conventions
  • Ideas as Governance Technologies
  • Ideational Political Economy: Strengths and Weaknesses
  • The Link Not Made? Rational Choice Theory and Political Economy
  • Conclusions: comparing approaches and the question of boundaries
  • 9 The Global Context of Comparative Politics
  • Structure, rationality, and culture in domestic-international linkages
  • Structure
  • Rationality
  • Culture
  • Hybrids (“Paradigm Busters”)
  • Domestic-international linkages and the comparative politics of east asia and the middle east
  • The Sources of Competing Models of Political Survival
  • Structural Sources
  • Rational Sources
  • Culture
  • The Consequences of Models of Political Survival
  • Structural Consequences
  • Rationality
  • Culture
  • Conclusions
  • 10 Comparative Perspectives on Contentious Politics
  • Common properties of contentious politics
  • Interactions, Claims, and Governments
  • Proximate Effects
  • Political Opportunity Structures
  • Formation of Collective Actors
  • Performances and Repertoires
  • The evolution of the field
  • The Political Process Approach
  • Skocpol on Revolutions
  • Rational Choice and Resource Mobilization
  • McCarthy and Zald Focus on Social Movement Organizations
  • The Construction of Contention
  • Scott Takes Constructivism South
  • Searches for Synthesis
  • Mechanisms and processes of contention
  • Mobilization: A Cluster of Mechanisms
  • Demobilization: A Different Cluster of Mechanisms
  • Two distinctive forms of contentious politics
  • Social Movements
  • Capacity and Contention
  • From Nondemocracy to Democracy
  • Special-Purpose Associations
  • Lethal Conflicts and Civil Wars
  • Contentious politics and comparative politics
  • Extending Scope Conditions in China
  • Transitions between Forms of Contention
  • Transnational Contention and Global Social Movements
  • Open questions in the study of contentious politics
  • Episodes versus Discrete Forms of Conflict
  • The Methodological Conundrum
  • Ethnographic Fieldwork
  • Naturalistic Experiments
  • Nonmainstream Quantitative Analysis
  • Where next?
  • 11 Citizenship in Democratic Politics: Density Dependence and the Micro-Macro Divide
  • Introduction and overview
  • Patterns of interdependence in the study of comparative politics
  • Levels of meaning in the study of democratic politics
  • Ecological fallacies, individualistic fallacies, and the problem of interdependence
  • Comparative politics as a general case of multilevel analysis
  • Data problems and exemplary efforts
  • Social networks as the connecting tissue between individuals and aggregates
  • Implications for comparative analysis
  • The micro-macro divide in political capacity
  • Implications for alternative visions of politics
  • Cultural Theories
  • Structural Theories
  • Rational Actor Theories
  • A comparative vision of democratic politics and the vote: a reprise
  • Conclusion: the importance of specific patterns of social relations
  • 12 Nested Citizens: Macropolitics and Microbehavior in Comparative Politics
  • Mixed ancestry: origins of research on comparative mass politics
  • The pieces of the puzzle: multilevel models in comparative research on mass politics
  • Some examples: representational structures and voter behavior
  • The ties that could bind: nested citizens and structuralists, rationalists, and culturalists
  • Some last words: looking for a grand theory of multilevel politics?
  • 13 Back to the Future: Endogenous Institutions and Comparative Politics
  • Starting with a stylized fact: electoral rules and the welfare state
  • Causal mechanisms
  • Empirical attempts to illuminate mechanisms
  • The endogeneity problem
  • Empirical strategies to confront endogeneity
  • Econometric Analysis
  • Analytical History
  • Natural Experiments
  • Field Experiments
  • Conclusions
  • 14 The Comparative Political Economy of the Welfare State
  • The structural determinants of social spending: the role of economic development
  • Openness
  • The Systematic Clustering of Policies: Accounting for Cross-National Differences among Welfare State
  • Welfare Regimes in Developing Countries
  • Stability and change in social policies
  • Conclusion
  • 15 Making Causal Claims about the Effect of “Ethnicity”
  • The properties of ethnic identity assumed by causal claims about ethnic identity
  • Why making reasonable causal claims about the effect of ethnic identity requires a definition
  • What is an ethnic identity?
  • Justification
  • Comparison with other definitions
  • Properties of ethnic identity categories
  • Constrained Change
  • Visibility
  • The weak presumption that ethnicity matters in our causal claims
  • How to construct causal claims with stronger priors
  • Disaggregating Ethnicity
  • Making Claims Based on Intrinsic Properties
  • Making Claims about Distributions, Not Dichotomies
  • References
  • Author Index
  • Subject Index

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