Can Political Science History Be Neutral?
In: American political science review, Band 84, Heft 2, S. 587
ISSN: 0003-0554
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In: American political science review, Band 84, Heft 2, S. 587
ISSN: 0003-0554
In: The information sources of political science 2
In: Journal of policy history: JPH, Band 16, Heft 2, S. 126-136
ISSN: 0898-0306
After a close association in the first half of the 20th century, during the 1970s the political science & history disciplines parted company: political science embraced behavioral analysis of narrow questions & historians lost interest in government institutions & public policy. However, in the 1980s & 1990s, the field of American Political Development gained in popularity among political scientists who pursued broader historical questions, eg, Progressive Era reform, the New Deal, etc. Institutional political historians emerged to tackle issues surrounding law & public policy & the development of the modern administrative state. The exciting connections between political science & history should not be limited to American Political Development, however. Examples of other scholarship examining the connections are reviewed, eg, in civic participation, the relationship between race & politics, international political economy, & the philosophy of history. Each discipline still has its unique approach but for the study of politics, an understanding of the other is of great benefit. M. Pflum
In: Cambridge elements. Elements in historical theory and practice
"This Element denaturalizes political science, stressing the contestability and contingency of ideas, traditions, subfields, and even the discipline itself. The history of political science is less one of scholars testing and improving theories by reference to data than of their appropriating and transforming ideas, often obscuring or obliterating former meanings, to serve new purposes in shifting political contexts. Political science arose in the late nineteenth century as part of a wider modernism that replaced earlier developmental narratives with more formal explanations. It changed as some scholars yoked together behavioural topics, quantitative techniques, and positivist theory, and as other scholars rejected their doing so. Subfields such as international relations remained semi-detached and focussed on policy as much as theory. Furthermore, the shifting fashions within political science - modernism, behaviouralism, realism, neoliberalism, the new institutionalism - have informed the policies by which governments have tried to tame contingency and govern people"--
In: Political studies, Band 39, Heft Sep 91
ISSN: 0032-3217
Regards the study of politics not so much as a discipline with a distinctive method but more as a field of study which is amenable to various approaches. Suggests that the contribution of history has been more a body of knowledge than a set of methods. (SJK)
In: American political science review, Band 82, Heft 4, S. 1245
ISSN: 0003-0554
In: German politics: Journal of the Association for the Study of German Politics, Band 12, Heft 3, S. 151-152
ISSN: 0964-4008
In: Political studies, Band 58, Heft 2, S. 354-368
ISSN: 0032-3217
In: Politicka misao, Band 32, Heft 5, S. 212-214
In: Polity: the journal of the Northeastern Political Science Association, Band 36, Heft 4, S. 579-593
ISSN: 0032-3497
This essay addresses the interrelationship of individual skill, organizational structure, & political context & seeks to establish the possibilities of theoretical generalization concerning political leadership. Working at the interstice of what might called "theoretical history," the author reflects on his own previous contributions to the literature & those of his collaborators. These studies have dealt with an analysis of one institution, the Tennessee Valley Authority, over time; of a group of similarly placed officials whose careers spanned different organizations &/or contexts; & of presidents & prime ministers in the US & UK within a limited historical context. The author concludes by proposing additional research in the form of "small studies" across time & space that may yield new perspectives on possibilities for political leadership in the contemporary world rather than predictive political science. Adapted from the source document.
In: Routledge approaches to history 52
Introduction : political history and political science : the great potential of an under explored collaboration / Carlos Domper Lasús and Giorgia Priorelli -- Political science and political history : creating a new integral approach / Sho Muto -- Corporatism and dictatorship : between politics and history / António Costa Pinto -- Approaching elections under autocracies from a multidisciplinary political perspective : the case of Iberian dictatorships (1945-1975) / Carlos Domper Lasús -- War : the necessary reassembly of a fragmented research object / Luca Baldissara -- History and political science in forced migration studies : interlacing seemingly incompatible approaches of analysis / Giorgia Priorelli -- Transition to democracy / Miguel Ángel Ruiz Carnicer -- Political science as a modernist project / Giovanni Orsina -- Thinking with history in policy / Lorenzo Castellani -- A never-ending crisis? : the history of the mass party in the social sciences and history / Anne Heyer -- Studying populism at the intersection of political science and political history : the case of the Boerenpartij in the Netherlands, 1950s-1970s / Simon Tunderman, Léonie de Jonge, and Stefan Couperus -- Teaching communism and post-communism in the 21st century / Andres Garcia Aravena and Vladimir Tismaneanu.