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The Future of Political Science: 100 Perspectives

Editat de Gary King, Kay L. Schlozman, Norman Nie
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 mar 2009
This book contains some of the newest, most exciting ideas now percolating among political scientists, from hallway conversations to conference room discussions. To spur future research, enrich classroom teaching, and direct non-specialist attention to cutting-edge ideas, a distinguished group of authors from various parts of this sprawling and pluralistic discipline has each contributed a brief essay about a single novel or insufficiently appreciated idea on some aspect of political science. The one hundred essays are concise, no more than a few pages apiece, and informal. While the contributions are highly diverse, readers can find unexpected connections across the volume, tracing echoes as well as diametrically opposed points of view. This book offers compelling points of departure for everyone who is concerned about political science -- whether as a scholar, teacher, student, or interested reader.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780415997010
ISBN-10: 0415997011
Pagini: 304
Ilustrații: 1 table
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.56 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Postgraduate and Undergraduate

Cuprins

Introduction  1. The United States: A Different Democracy, Arend Lijphart  2. Taking Portraits or Group Photos?, Russell Dalton  3. Why Political Theorists Should Think More Carefully About Leadership, Nannerl O. Keohane  4. The Leadership Gap, Mark A. Peterson  5. Instrumental Value of Elite Memories on Past Violence during the Emergence of a New State: Slovenian Experience, Anton Kramberger, Ana Barbic and Katja Boh  6. Politicians are People, too, Philip Edward Jones 7 . Elite Tough Talk and the Tides of History, Henry E. Brady  8. Representation as a Field of Study, Barry C. Burden  9. Political Science: What Should We Know?, David Butler  10. Dynamic Categories and the Context of Power, Jane Junn  11. Politics as Learning, Hugh Heclo  12. Rounding Up the Activists, Kent Jennings  13. The Troubling Persistence of Injustice, Michael L. Frazer  14. Making a Name for Oneself, Harvey Mansfield  15. Political Variation across Contexts, Michael Jones-Correa  16. Homo Politicus is Not an Island, Claudine Gay  17. The Sociological Bases of Political Preferences and Behavior, Casey A. Klofstad  18. Community Social Capital, Kristi Andersen  19. Tuned In, But Dropped Out, Carole Jean Uhlaner  20. Cognition, Emotion and Selectivity in Political Communication in a Multi-Facetted World, Rational Choice and Political Culture, Robert H. Bates  21. Who Wants War?, Ann Sartori  22. The Threat to Democracy, Lawrence R. Jacobs  23. Nationalist Missions and the Democratic Citizen, Katherine Tate  24. Something's Going On Here, but We Don't Know What It Is: Measuring Citizens' Exposure to Politically-Relevant Information in the New Media Environment, Michael X. Delli Carpini  25. What We Still Need to Know Why and How People Become Committed Democrats, Philip Oxhorn  26. When We Could Do So Much Better: Democratic Commitment and Empirical Political Psychology, by Virginia Sapiro  27. Political Science and the Future, James Q. Wilson  28. Family Matters, David E. Campbell  29. Where do the Premises of Political Choice Come From?, Daniel Carpenter 30. Immigration, Partisanship and Electoral Change, Norman H. Nie  31. Decisions People Make in Small Groups, John Aldrich  32. Why Do (Some) People Acquire Costly Political Knowledge?, Torben Iversen  33. A Political View of Political Ideology, John Zaller  34. Guess What? Voters are Smart, Gerald Pomper  35. Extra! Extra! Extra Info Needed with Survey Reporting, Andrea Louise Campbell  36. What Should Journalists and Politicians Know? Beyond the Margin of Error, Morris P. Fiorina  37. The Need for Survey Reporting Standards in Political Science, D. Sunshine Hillygus  38. The Changing Evidence Base of Political Science Research, Gary King  39. FMRI and Public Opinion Research, Ikua Kabashima  40. Special Interest Politics, Jeffry A. Frieden  41. An Ever Fainter Voice, Jeffrey M. Berry  42. Exploring Political Inequality, Benjamin I. Page  43. Voice, and Then What?, Larry M. Bartels  44. The Impact of Unequal Political Participation on Policy Outcome, Eric Schickler  45. Participation Matters, Jan Leighley  46. Participatory Distortion ($$) Takes Off!!, Philip Converse  47. The Rashomon World of Money and Politics, Thomas E. Mann  48. Does Rising Economic Inequality Matter, Christopher Jencks  49. Redistribution without Representation and Representation without Redistribution, James E. Alt  50. The Ideological Origins of Redistribution, Eric Nelson  51. Reuniting Interests and Values, David C. Leege  52. Using Research to Foster Democracy, Ken Stehlik-Berry  53. "Moral Convictions, Religion, and Diversity: Our Political Atmosphere, William C. McCready  54. Equality and Inclusiveness, Diversity and Conflict, John R. Petrocik  55. The End of 'the Protestant Nation', Byron Shafer  56. The Political Force of Group Consciousness, Bill Schneider  57. Going Global: New challenges and opportunities in research on democratic participation and the civic culture, Pippa Norris  58. The Effects of Immigration and Sending Countries Outreach on American Public Opinion and Political Behavior, Rodolfo O. de La Garza  59. Exorcising Huntingtonian Specters, Ary Zolberg  60. Adding-in Sex Discrimination to Legacies of Wrongdoing, Eileen McDonaugh  61. Gender Inequality, Nancy Burns  62. Gender Differences as the Basis for a Refoundation of the Social Sciences: The Political Integration of Women: Explaining Women’s Slow Advancement into Political Office, Michelle Swers  63. Is American Becoming a More Class-Based Society?, Robert Putnam  64. The NAACP Nobody Knows, Richard Vallelly  65. At the Intersection of Inequalities, Shauna L. Shames  66. The Professional Campaign, Ganesh Sitamaran  67. What Politicians Actually Can do: A Modest Proposal for Reporting on Campaigns, Daniel Schlozman  68. Elections: Five Rules for Commentators, John Mark Hansen  69. Negative Ads, Cynical Public?, Arthur Sanders  70. Independent Electoral Commissions, Nahomi Ichino  71. Watch Out! The Units You are Comparing May Not be What They Used to be!, Philippe C. Schmitter  72. Don't Stay Home: The Utility of Area Studies for Political Science Scholarship, by Jorge I. Dominguez  73. Can We Really be Happy with the Study of Comparative Government?, Hans Daalder  74. The Contingent Flaw of Majoritarian Systems, G. Bingham Powell, Jr.  75. Religion and Politics, Goldie Shabad  76. Study China!, Roderick MacFarquhar  77. Soft Power and the Future of Asia, by Lucian Pye  78. The Study of International Law, by Jens Meierhenrich  79. The Second Image Reversed Revisited, Robert Keohane  80. The Globalization Gap, James Rosenau  81. Congress and the Scope of Democracy, Ira Katznelson  82. 'Free Association': Traveling Ideas and the Study of Political Equality, Nancy Rosenblum  83. To Participate or Deliberate —is that the Question?, Dennis F. Thompson  84. Understanding Democracy as a Complex Adaptive System, Louise K.Comfort  85. The Public Roots of Private Action: A New Look at Voting Costs, Susan B. Hansen  86. On the Free Rider Problem, Jane Mansbridge  87. Time and Action in the 21st Century, Anya Bernstein  88. The Organizational 'Gap' in Political Science, Joseph LaPalombara  89. The Sudden Birth of Sticky Institutions, 1890-1915, Gerald Gamm  90. The Emerging Field of Education Policy, Paul Peterson  91. American Politics and the Not-So-Benign Neglect of Criminal Justice, Traci Burch  92. Law or Politics?, H. W. Perry, Jr.  93. What is Public Policy?, Catherine E. Rudder  94. Note to Politicians: Forget the Silver Bullet!, Kay Lehman Schlozman  95. Rediscovering Complexity and Synthesis, Bear F. Braumoeller  96. Why?, Kenneth A. Shepsle  97. Path Dependence, Peter A. Hall  98. Searching for a Politics of Space, Jennifer Hochschild  99. The Question of Relevance, Joseph S. Nye, Jr.  100. Can (Should) Political Science be a Policy Science?, Kenneth Prewitt

Notă biografică

Gary King is David Florence Professor of Government at Harvard University.
Kay Lehman Schlozman is J. Joseph Moakley Professor of Political Science at Boston College.
Norman Nie is Research Professor of Political Science at Stanford University and Professor Emeritus at University of Chicago.

Recenzii

"In this one-of-a-kind collection, an eclectic set of contributors offer short but forceful forecasts about the future of the discipline. The resulting assortment is captivating, consistently thought-provoking, often intriguing, and sure to spur discussion and debate."
Wendy K. Tam Cho, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
"King, Schlozman, and Nie have created a visionary and stimulating volume. The organization of the essays strikes me as nothing less than brilliant: The book enacts the process that it seeks to engender, generating a spirit of serendipitous discovery and insight in the very process of reading a book devoted to encouraging new directions in research, scholarly exploration, and discovery. It is a volume that will be greatly welcomed in the discipline and could become a classic, creating a new genre and also providing students as well as scholars with a ready source of intellectual stimulation and research strategies. It is truly a joy to read."
Lawrence C. Dodd, Manning J. Dauer Eminent Scholar in Political Science, University of Florida
"The list of authors in The Future of Political Science is a "who's who" of political science. As I was reading it, I came to think of it as a platter of tasty hors d'oeuvres. It hooked me thoroughly."
Peter Kingstone, University of Connecticut
"This is a very high quality project, well-written and accessible. The book is truly unique and really has no competitor in the field. The Future of Political Science will clearly appeal to scholars and graduate students across all subfields within the discipline. It is a wonderful contribution."
Brian Schaffner, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Descriere

This book contains some of the newest, most exciting ideas now percolating within political science. One hundred authors each contribute a brief essay about a single novel or insufficiently appreciated idea on some aspect of political science.