Skip to Content

Comparative Politics

Critical Concepts in Political Science

Edited by Howard J. Wiarda

Published December 23rd 2004 by Routledge – 2,592 pages

Series: Critical Concepts in Political Science

Purchasing Options:

Description

Comparative politics is the systematic study of all of the world's political systems. Its focus is both the processes of politics (such as public opinion formation, interest group lobbying and political party activity) and the institutions of government (such as executives, legislatures and legal systems). All of these are viewed comparatively, in terms of how they differ, or are similar, from country to country or region to region.

The collection begins with an introductory volume explaining the history and main approaches and controversies in the field: from formal-legalism; to developmentalism; to dependency theory, corporatism, and state-society relations; to political economy, rational choice and the new institutionalism.

Titles also available in this series include, Fascism (December 2003, 5 Volumes, £595) and the forthcoming titles Peace Studies (2005, 4 Volumes, c.£495) and Terrorism (2005, 4 Volumes, c.£495).

Contents

Volume I: History, Theory, Context

Volume II: Western Europe and the United States: Foundations of Comparative Politics

Volume III: The Politics of Asia

Volume IV: Post-Communist Politics and Change in Russia and East/Central Europe

Volume V: Developing Nations: Latin America, the Middle East and Sub-Saharan Africa

Volume VI: Comparative Public Policy