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Title: Intro to Comparative Politics


1
Intro to Comparative Politics
  • Sept. 22

2
Lecture Overview
  • Focus of comparative politics
  • The science of political science?
  • Quick history of comparative politics

3
Focus of Comparative Politics
  • What is the focus of comparative politics?

4
Focus of Comparative Politics
  • Internal Power Structures
  • Comparative politics does not ignore external
    influences on internal structures, but its
    ultimate concern is power configurations within
    political systems (Caramani, 2008 3).

5
Focus of Comparative Politics
  • often simply means studying foreign countries
  • the use of case studies
  • area specialists
  • It need not be explicitly comparative.
  • The editor of our textbook doesnt endorse such
    an approach (Caramani, 2008 4).

6
Focus of Comparative Politics
  • A comparative study may focus on a small number
    of countries (two or more) or it may attempt to
    incorporate the analysis of a very large range of
    countries.
  • Countries, in fact, need not be the unit of
    analysis, sub-national regional political units
    or supra-national units may be the focus.

7
The science of political science?
  • the intent of comparative politics is that of a
    rigorous scientific and empirical field of study
    description, explanation, and prediction
    (Caramani, 2008 20).
  • Is political science a science?
  • Do social sciences differ from natural sciences?
    How and why?

8
The science of political science?
  • Daniele Caramani suggests (2008 3) that,
    Whereas political theory deals with normative
    questions (about equality, democracy, justice,
    etc.), comparative politics deals with empirical
    questions.
  • Even though comparative political scientists are
    of course concerned also by normative questions,
    the discipline as such is empirical and
    value-neutral

9
The science of political science?
  • Is it possible to create a value-free or
    neutral political science?
  • Is it desirable to create a value-free or
    neutral political science?

10
Origins of comparative politics
  • Plato and Aristotle, while usually considered
    political theorists, were engaged in the process
    of comparing different political regimes
  • aristocracy, oligarchy, democracy, tyranny

11
Origins of comparative politics
  • Modern comparative politics can be traced back to
    (among others)
  • Machiavelli, The Prince, 1532.
  • Montesquieu, On the Spirit of the Laws, 1748
  • Alexis de Tocqueville, On Democracy in America,
    1835

12
Formal-legal, institutional approach
  • First half of the 20th century, the emerging
    discipline of political science focused on the
    formal-legal institutions of the state.

13
Political Behaviour, Political Culture
  • In the 1950s and 60s, attention turned toward the
    study of the political behaviour and political
    attitudes of the public.
  • The behavioural revolution
  • This was facilitated by developments in survey
    techniques and emerging computerization. This
    greatly increased the possibility for
    number-crunching among social scientists.

14
The reaction against the behavioural revolution
  • The new form of empirical political science still
    has its proponents today, but by the late 1960s
    it was under attack from a variety of directions
    and for a variety of reasons.

15
The Politics of Political Science Methodology
  • York University, 1969
  • Fifty student radicals converged on a meeting of
    the Canadian Political Science Associationto
    denounce what they called the methodology of
    political science.
  • Protesters walked into the Vanier College dining
    hall carrying balloons, flowers and signs
    denouncing David Eastons systems analysis
    theory.
  • See http//imprint.uwaterloo.ca/pdfarchive/1969-7
    0_v10,n06_Chevron.pdf

16
A Return to Institutions
  • By the 1980s, various scholars were attempting to
    bring the state back in to the centre of their
    analysis.
  • This form of institutionalism often portrays
    state actors as having a degree of autonomy and
    different state structures as influencing
    political outcomes.

17
B. Guy Peters, chapter 2 (next week)
  • The 5 Is
  • Institutions,
  • Interests,
  • Ideas,
  • Individuals,
  • International environment
  • a bonus, 6th - interactions
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