Introducing comparative politics : concepts and cases in context
著者
書誌事項
Introducing comparative politics : concepts and cases in context
CQ Press, c2009
大学図書館所蔵 全2件
  青森
  岩手
  宮城
  秋田
  山形
  福島
  茨城
  栃木
  群馬
  埼玉
  千葉
  東京
  神奈川
  新潟
  富山
  石川
  福井
  山梨
  長野
  岐阜
  静岡
  愛知
  三重
  滋賀
  京都
  大阪
  兵庫
  奈良
  和歌山
  鳥取
  島根
  岡山
  広島
  山口
  徳島
  香川
  愛媛
  高知
  福岡
  佐賀
  長崎
  熊本
  大分
  宮崎
  鹿児島
  沖縄
  韓国
  中国
  タイ
  イギリス
  ドイツ
  スイス
  フランス
  ベルギー
  オランダ
  スウェーデン
  ノルウェー
  アメリカ
注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 532) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Have you been tempted to teach your intro course thematically, but are afraid that your students will be unable to see how concepts relate to actual countries? Yet sticking with a country by-country approach means never being able to fully address the questions that really engage comparativists. But that has its drawbacks as well. Is there an ideal middle ground between the current text approaches to the field?
Carol Ann Drogus and Stephen Orvis, a Latin Americanist and an Africanist by training, offer an innovative hybrid approach to the field. The book is organized thematically around important concepts in comparative politics; in turn, each chapter is framed by the questions of who rules?, what motivates political behavior?, and where and why? Then, within each chapter, the authors have integrated a set of extended case studies based on a selection of ten "core" countries. Serving as consistent geographic touchstones, students get to know these countries as they accumulate conceptual knowledge. The cases are placed in chapters where they make the most sense substantively-not separated from theory or in a separate volume-and vividly illustrate issues in cross-national context.
An array of thematic features extends the book's analysis and effectively integrates case material:
-Case Studies Forming the backbone of country coverage, these "baseline" cases are substantial enough for students to build foundational knowledge about the ten core countries of Brazil, China, Germany, India, Iran, Japan, Nigeria, Russia, the UK, and the U.S. Because each case is tied to an analytic question or idea, students aren't lost in a sea of detail, but rather see country coverage in real thematic context.
-Mini-cases Because no group of core countries can illustrate the full scope of issues in comparative politics, the authors include "mini-cases" throughout the book. These briefer cases focus on topics such as state failure, ethnic violence, and economic differences and feature countries about which most other texts say very little: Afghanistan, Chile, Cuba, Guatemala, Kenya, the Philippines, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Sierra Leone, Vietnam, Zimbabwe, and others.
-In Context These short fact lists-like those students might find in an opinion-leader periodical such as Harper's-take simple data and put them into interesting, often provocative context. The number of military coups in Africa versus Latin America or the change over time in the number of one-party states might surprise students and offer enlightening perspective for thinking through an issue.
-Where and Why? In these boxes, students explore why certain events and developments happen in some countries and not in others. Why have some countries been able to develop enduring democratic governments, while others remain or become authoritarian? Or, why do some states have women in powerful political positions while others do not?
-Country and Concept The majority of chapters include a table that shows key indicators for the core countries. For instance, in the chapter on the modern state, the authors include such data as each state's year of establishment, its failed state ranking, its government revenue as percentage of GDP, and its rating on the corruption perception index-all important measures of each state's size and nature.
Helping students critically read as well as review and study:
* Chapter-opener questions
* Bolded key terms and glossary
* Data-rich tables and figures
* Substantive maps
* Compelling and instructive photos
* End-of-chapter lists that include key concepts, work cited, seminal books and articles, and important online databases
目次
Part I. A Framework for Understanding Comparative Politics
Introduction
The Big Issues
Comparative Politics: What Is It? Why Study It? How to Study It?
Three Key Questions in Comparative Politics
Plan of the Book
Key Concepts
Works Cited
Resources for Further Study
The Modern State
Characteristics of the Modern State
Mini-Case: Somaliland
Historical Origins of Modern States
Weak and Failed States
Mini-Case: Afghanistan
Mini-Case: Sierra Leone and Liberia: Collapsed States
Case Studies in State Formation
Case Study: United Kingdom
Case Study: The United States
Case Study: Japan
Case Study: Germany
Case Study: Brazil
Case Study: Russia
Case Study: Iran
Case Study: India
Case Study: China
Case Study: Nigeria
Key Concepts
Works Cited
Resources for Further Study
Conclusion
States and Citizens
Regimes, Ideologies, and Citizens
Case Study: United Kingdom: "Cradle of Democracy"
Case Study: Russia
Case Study: Nazi Germany
Mini-Case: Tanzania's One-Party Regime
Case Study: Brazil: The Bureaucratic Authoritarian State, 1964-1985
Case Study: Nigeria: Neopatrimonial Military Rule, 1966-1979 and 1983-1999
Case Study: The Islamic Republic of Iran, 1979-
Conclusion
Key Concepts
Works Cited
Resources for Further Study
State and Identity
The Debate over Identity
Nations and Nationalism
Mini-Case: Civic Nationalism in France
Case Study: Nationalism in Germany
Ethnicity and Religion
Case Study: The Strange History of Ethnicity and Religion in Nigeria
Mini-Case: Rwanda: Genocide and Ethnic Violence
Race Mini-Case: Bolivia: Regional Conflict
Case Study: Racial Politics in the United States
Case Study: Race in Brazil
Conclusion
Key Concepts
Works Cites
Resources for Further Study
The State and the Market
The Market, Capitalism, and the State
Key Economic Debates
Globalization: A New World Order or Deja Vu All Over Again?
States and Markets around the World
Case Study: The United States: The Free Market Model
Case Study: Germany: The Social Market Economy
Mini-Case: The European Union, Economic Sovereignty, and Globalization
Case Study: Japan: The Developmental State and Its Crisis
Case Study: Brazil: Modernizing Authoritarianism, ISI, and Debt Crisis
Mini-Case: Chile: Early Neoliberal Reformer
Case Study: Nigeria: Oil, Corruption, and Dependence
Case Study: The Judiciary" Germany and Brazil
Conclusion
Key Concepts
Works Cited
Resources for Further Study
Part II. Political Systems and How They Work
Political Institutions: Governing
Institutions: Executives and Legislatures
Case Study: Parliamentary Rule: Britain and India
Case Study: Presidentialism: The United States and Brazil
Mini-Case: France's Semipresidentialism
Case Study: Russia: Semipresidentialism in a New Democracy with Weak Functions
Judiciary
Case Study: The Judiciary: Germany and Brazil
Bureaucracy
Case Study: Bureaucratic Control and Corruption: Japan and India
Federalism
Case Study: Federalism: Brazil, India, Russia
Conclusion
Key Concepts
Works Cited
Resources for Further Study
Political Institutions: Participation and Representation
Formal Institutions: The Electoral System
Formal Institutions: Political Parties and Party Systems
Mini-Case: Mexico
Mini-Case: France and the Shift toward a Two-Party System
Civil Society
Case Study: United States: Evolution of a Two-Party, Pluralist System
Case Study: Germany: Neocorporatism under Threat
Case Study: Japan: A Dominant-Party System, Weak Civil Society, and Electoral Reform
Case Study: India: From Dominant Party to Multiparty Democracy
Conclusion
Key Concepts
Works Cited
Resources for Further Study
Authoritarian Institutions
Governing Institutions in Authoritarian Regimes
Mini-Case: The "Politics of Survival" in Mobutu's Zaire
Mini-Case: Succession in Egypt and Zimbabwe
Elections, Parties, and Civil Society in Authoritarian Regimes
Case Study: China: From Communist to Modernizing Authoritarian Rule
Case Study: Iran: Theocracy with Limited Participation
Case Study: Nigeria: Weakening Institutions under Military Rule
Conclusion
Key Concepts
Works Cited
Resources for Further Study
Regime Change: Coups, Revolutions, and Democratization
The Military in Politics: Coups d'Etat
Case Study: Comparing Coups: Brazil and Nigeria
Revolution
Case Study: Revolution: China and Iran
Democratization
Mini-Case: Philippines
Case Study: Brazil: Model Transition and the Question of Democratic Deepening
Case Study: Russia: Transition to Semi-Authoritarian Rule
Case Study: Nigeria: Neopatrimonial Transition
Conclusion
Key Concepts
Works Cited
Resources for Further Study
Part III. Issues and Policies
Globalization , Deindustrialization, and Development
Wealthy Countries: Deindustrialization and the Welfare State
Case Study: United Kingdom: Radical Reform in a Liberal Market Economy
Case Study: Germany: Struggling to Reform the Social Market Economy
Development and Globalization
Mini-Case: South Korea's Economic Miracle
Mini-Case: Where Are the Middle Eastern "Tigers"?
Case Study: China: An Emerging Powerhouse
Case Study: India: Development and Democracy
Case Study: Brazil: Does Globalization Allow a Different Path?
Case Study: Iran and Nigeria: Struggling with the Blessings of Oil
Conclusion
Key Concepts
Works Cited
Resources for Further Study
Public Policy When Markets Fail: Welfare, Health, and the Environment
"Welfare": Social Policy in Comparative Perspective
Mini-Case: Sweden's Welfare State
Case Study: Germany: Reforming the Christian Democratic Welfare State
Case Study: The United States: Reforming the Liberal Welfare State
Case Study: Brazil: Starting a Welfare State in a Developing Economy
Health Care and Health Policy
Case Study: Germany: Pioneer of Modern Health Policy
Case Study: United Kingdom: Reforming the NHS
Case Study: U.S. Health Policy: Trials and Tribulations of the Market Model
Environmental Problems and Policy
Case Study: The United States: Pioneer that Lost Its Way?
Case Study: China: Searching for Sustainable Development
Case Study: Nigeria and Oil: A Question of Environmental Justice and Sustainable Development
Conclusion
Key Concepts
Works Cited
Resources for Further Study
Policies and Politics of Inclusion and Clashing Values
Religion: Recognition, Autonomy, and the Secular State
Mini-Case: Islamic Headscarves in France and Turkey
Case Study: United Kingdom: Religious Challenge to Multiculturalism
Case Study: India: Secularism in a Religious and Religiously Plural Society
Gender: The Continuing Struggle for Equal Social Status, Representation, and Participation
Mini-Case: Women in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait
Case Study: Russia: Women through Social and Political Transformation
Case Study: Iran: Social Gains, Political and Cultural Restrictions, and Islamic Feminism
Sexual Orientation: Assimilation or Liberation?
Case Study: The United States: Birthplace of a Movement but Limited Policy Change
Case Study: Brazil: LGBT Rights in a New Democracy
Conclusion
Key Concepts
Works Cited
For Further Study
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