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This book describes five paradigms of political explanation: rational choice theory, political psychology, community analysis, Marx, and Weber. It is a text for beginning students of political science and for more advanced students who want to reflect on modes of thought in political analysis.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
1. The Point of Departure 2. Explaining Political Phenomena: The Case of Turnout in National Elections 3. Research Schools in Political Science 4. How Research Schools Structure Analysis and Produce Conflicting Visions of Politics 5. How We Know When We Know: Testing Claims to Knowledge in Political Science 6. What We Mean When We Call Political Science a Science: Ambiguity and Certainty in the Pursuit of Knowledge
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Alan S. Zuckerman is professor of political science and Judaic studies and director of the social science data center at Brown University. He has also served as Fulbright professor of political science at Tel-Aviv University and the University of Pisa and visiting research fellow at the University of Essex. Among his publications are
The Politics of Faction: Christian Democratic Rule in Italy and
The Transformation of the Jews as well as numerous articles on Jewish communities, the Holocaust of European Jewry, political cleavages, political parties, and electoral behavior.
Zusammenfassung
This book describes five paradigms of political explanation: rational choice theory, political psychology, community analysis, Marx, and Weber. It is a text for beginning students of political science and for more advanced students who want to reflect on modes of thought in political analysis.