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Informationen zum Autor Mark Haugaard is Senior Lecturer in social theory in the Department of Political Science and Sociology at the National University of Ireland, Galway and was Jean Monnet Fellow at the European University Institute, Florence. He is founding Editor of the Journal of Power and Chair of the IPSA Research Committee on Political Power. His research interests combine normative political theory and sociological theory. This includes theories of power, domination, freedom, nationalism, liberalism, identity and governmentality. He has published over thirty articles and books on power and related subjects. Born in Bradford, England, Stewart R. Clegg was Reader at Griffith University (1976-84), Professor at the University of New England (1985-9), Professor at the University of St. Andrews (1990-3), Foundation Professor at the University of Western Sydney, Macarthur, (1993-6) before moving to the University of Technology Sydney (UTS). He is Research Director of CMOS (Centre for Management and Organization Studies) Research at UTS, and holds a small number of Visiting Professorships at prestigious European universities and research centres. Presently he has a number of ARC competitive grants and is one of the most published and cited authors in the top-tier journals in the Organization Studies field. Recently he has written on topics as diverse as 'food', 'strategy', 'modernity' and 'gossip'. Klappentext Power theory, as a burgeoning field of study, has had, and continues to have, a huge impact across the social sciences. In particular, there has been considerable innovative work in the fields of organization studies and politics which in turn has fed research in a wide array of related fields, such as public administration, cultural studies, management and democratic theory. However, work on power is sprawling and seemingly eclectic - this Eight-Volume Set combines Power and Politics, along with the companion set Power and Organizations, to take stock of the theory by reviewing its foundations, current status and emerging new directions in both organization studies and political theory. While there is evident synergy and cross-fertilization across the fields of organization studies and political theory, through the impact of work by figures such as Lukes, Bourdieu, Foucault, Haugaard, Clegg, Dean, Allen and others, there is sufficient distinction to warrant two separate but related collections. Zusammenfassung Internationally renowned editors! Stewart Clegg and Mark Haugaard! have joined forces to compile this major collection on power theory. Inhaltsverzeichnis POWER AND POLITICS VOLUME ONE The Three-Dimensional Power Debate: Power Over as Domination The Concept of Political Power - Robert Dahl How to Study Community Power: The Pluralist Alternative - Nelson W. Polsby Bachrach, Peter and Baratz, Morton (1962): The Two Faces of Power - Clarence Stone Decisions and Nondecisions: An Analytic Framework - Peter Bachrach and Morton Baratz Nondecisions and the Study of Local Politics - Raymond E. Wolfinger Comment: On Issues and Nonissue in the Study of Power - Fredrick W. Frey Rejoiner to Freys "Comments" - Raymond E. Wolfinger Nondecisions and Power: The Two Faces of Bachrach and Baratz - Geoffrey Debenham Power and Its Two Faces Revisited: A Reply to Geoffrey Debnam - Peter Bachrach and Morton Baratz Rejoiner to "Comment" by Peter Bachrach and Morton S. Baratz - Geoffrey Debnam Critical Note: A Critique of Steven Lukes "Power: A Radical View" - Alan Bradshaw Critical Note: Reply to Bradshaw - Steven Lukes "Objective" Interests and the Sociology of Power - T. Benton Power, Interests and the Outcome of Struggles - Barry Hindess Steven Lukes on the Concept of Power - Peter Morriss Power as Capacity for Action: Power to as Empowerment On the Concept of Poli...