Comparative Politics: Interests, Identities, and Institutions in a Changing Global Order

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Edition: 2nd
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2005-09-05
Publisher(s): Cambridge University Press
List Price: $76.00

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Summary

Now in a completely updated second edition, this textbook has become a favorite for the introductory undergraduate course in comparative politics. It features ten theoretically and historically grounded country studies that show how the three major concepts of comparative analysis - interests, identities, and institutions - shape the politics of nations. Throughout the presentation, countries appear in the context of a changing global order that creates challenges to each country's path of development. These challenges frequently alter domestic interests and identities, and force countries to find new institutional solutions to the problems of modern politics. Written in a style free of heavy-handed jargon and organized to address the concerns of contemporary comparativists, this textbook provides students with the conceptual tools and historical background they need to understand the politics of our complex world.

Table of Contents

List of Maps
xvi
Preface to the Second Edition xvii
List of Contributors
xix
What Is Comparative Politics?
1(15)
Jeffrey Kopstein
Mark Lichbach
Introduction
1(3)
Comparative Politics and Political Science
2(2)
How Comparativists Practice Their Craft: Concepts and Methods
4(4)
Regime Types
4(1)
Tools of Analysis: Interests, Identities, and Institutions
4(4)
Comparative Politics and Developmental Paths
8(8)
A Changing Field
8(2)
Paths of Development
10(3)
Why Study Comparative Politics?
13(3)
The Framework of Analysis
16(23)
Jeffrey Kopstein
Mark Lichbach
Introduction
16(1)
Global Context
16(6)
Nations and States
17(1)
Globalization and Heterogeneities
18(1)
Local Heterogeneities
19(2)
World-Historical Time and Conflicts among States
21(1)
Domestic Interests, Identities, and Institutions
22(7)
Interests
22(2)
Identities
24(2)
Institutions
26(1)
Institutions as Consequences (of the Global Context) and as Causes (of Interests and Identities)
27(1)
Interests and Identities, and the Struggle over Institutions
28(1)
Developmental Paths to the Modern World
29(3)
Comparative-Politics Feedback
32(1)
International-Relations Feedback
33(2)
Our Approach to Comparison
35(1)
Conclusion
36(3)
PART ONE. EARLY DEVELOPERS
Britain
39(42)
Peter Rutland
Introduction
39(2)
The British Model
40(1)
The Long Road from Empire to Europe
41(4)
An Island Nation
41(1)
The End of Empire
42(2)
The Reluctant European
44(1)
Who Are the British? Contested Identities
45(6)
Forging a British Nation
46(1)
The Irish Question
47(2)
British -- and Black
49(2)
British Political Institutions
51(24)
The Path to Parliamentary Democracy
51(1)
The House of Commons
52(1)
From Cabinet to Prime Ministerial Government
53(2)
The Electoral System
55(2)
Political Behavior
57(1)
The Dignified Constitution
58(2)
Rival Interests and the Evolution of British Democracy
60(1)
The Rights Tradition
61(1)
The Impact of Industrialization
62(2)
Labour's Rise to Power
64(1)
The Postwar Consensus
65(1)
Thatcher to the Rescue?
66(2)
The Fall of Thatcher
68(2)
The Rise of New Labour
70(2)
Blair's Second Term
72(3)
Conclusion
75(1)
Key Phases in Britain's Development
76(1)
Bibliography
77(1)
Important Terms
77(2)
Study Questions
79(2)
France
81(50)
Arista Maria Cirtautas
Introduction
81(1)
The French Model: Continuity, Change, and Ambiguity
82(3)
From Revolution to Republic
85(13)
The Making of a Social Revolution: Domestic Responses to International Conditions
86(6)
In Pursuit of the Republic: Postrevolutionary Identities, Interests, and Institutions
92(6)
Contemporary Politics
98(14)
The Interplay of Interests and Identities in the Fifth Republic
98(7)
Institutions of the Fifth Republic
105(4)
Policy Making in the Fifth Republic
109(3)
Conclusion: Current Challenges
112(5)
Bibliography
117(2)
Key Phases in France's Development
119(1)
Important Terms
119(3)
Study Questions
122(3)
Stop and Compare
125(1)
Early Developers: Britain and France
125(6)
PART TWO. MIDDLE DEVELOPERS
Germany
131(38)
Andrew C. Gould
Introduction
131(1)
Origins of a Middle Developer, 100 B.C.--A.D. 1800
132(1)
Competing Modern States, 1800--1871
133(3)
Unification under Authoritarian Leadership, 1871--1919
136(2)
Democracy and Competitive Capitalism, 1919--1933
138(3)
Nazism in Power, 1933--1945
141(1)
Occupation (1945-1949), Division (1949--1990), and Unification (1990--)
142(1)
Interests in Contemporary Germany
143(3)
Identities in Contemporary Germany
146(3)
Institutions in Contemporary Germany
149(10)
Germany's Post--World War II Developmental Path
159(3)
Bibliography
162(1)
Key Phases in German Political Development
163(1)
Important Terms
164(3)
Study Questions
167(2)
Japan
169(36)
Miranda A. Schreurs
Introduction
169(1)
The Geography of Japan
170(1)
The Historical Roots of Institutions, Identities, and Interests
170(4)
Tokugawa Japan, 1603--1867
170(2)
The Meiji Era, 1868--1912
172(1)
A Brief Interlude with Democracy: The Taisho Democracy, 1918--1932
173(1)
Japan as a Military Power and a Colonial Force
174(1)
Occupation of Japan
175(1)
The Japanese Constitution and the Establishment of a New Political Order
176(2)
The ``Reverse Course'' and Japan's Emergence as a Key U.S. Ally
178(1)
Understanding Japan's ``Economic Miracle''
179(4)
Opposition to the Conservative Agenda
183(1)
The Politics of Reform
184(4)
Economic Reform
184(2)
Political Reform
186(2)
Carving Out a New International Role and Vision for Japan in a Changing Global Order
188(3)
Conclusion
191(1)
Bibliography
192(1)
Key Phases in Japan's Political Development
193(1)
Important Terms
194(1)
Study Questions
195(2)
Stop and Compare
197(1)
Early Developers and Middle Developers
197(1)
Middle Developers: Germany and Japan
197(8)
PART THREE. LATE DEVELOPERS
Russia
205(48)
Stephen E. Hanson
Introduction
205(1)
The Rise and Fall of the USSR
206(21)
From Marx to Lenin
206(6)
From Lenin to Stalin
212(8)
From Stalin to Gorbachev
220(7)
Interests, Identities, and Institutions in Post-Communist Russia
227(16)
The Leninist Legacy and Post-Soviet Interests
227(3)
Yeltsin and the Design of Post-Soviet Institutions
230(9)
The Putin Era
239(4)
Institutions, Interests, and the Search for a New Russian Identity
243(2)
Bibliography
245(1)
Key Phases in Russian Political Development
246(1)
Important Terms
247(3)
Study Questions
250(3)
China
253(46)
Yu-Shan Wu
Introduction
253(2)
Historical Background
255(6)
Developmental Stages of the Communist Regime
261(1)
The Maoist Period: Totalitarianism
262(7)
Deng Unleashes Reform
269(5)
Jiang Zemin, Hu Jintao, and Neoconservatism
274(5)
Will China Become Democratic?
279(3)
Bibliography
282(1)
Key Phases in Chinese Political Development
283(1)
Important Terms
284(6)
Study Questions
290(1)
Stop and Compare
291(1)
Early, Middle, and Late Developers
291(1)
Late Developers: Russia and China
291(8)
PART FOUR. EXPERIMENTAL DEVELOPERS
Mexico
299(44)
Anthony Gill
Introduction
299(2)
Historical, Social, and Ideological Origins
301(1)
The Colonial Period
302(2)
From Independence to Revolution
304(6)
Independence and the Era of the Caudillos
304(3)
The Ascendancy of Liberalism
307(2)
The Porfiriato
309(1)
Politics in the Twentieth Century: Revolution and Institutionalized Rule
310(7)
The Mexican Revolution
310(2)
The Revolution Institutionalized
312(4)
The Formal Institutional Structure of Mexican Politics
316(1)
The Crisis of Corporatism during the Late Twentieth Century
317(15)
Origins of the Crisis
318(2)
Political Challenges in the 1980s and 1990s
320(1)
The Political Consequences of Economic Crisis
321(1)
Interests, Identities, and Institutions at the End of the Twentieth Century
322(6)
The 2000 Presidential Election and Its Aftermath
328(4)
Conclusion
332(2)
Bibliography
334(1)
Key Phases in Mexican Development
335(2)
Important Terms
337(2)
Study Questions
339(4)
India
343(52)
Rudra Sil
Introduction
343(2)
Pre-independence India: Civilization and Empire to Colonialism and Nationalism
345(9)
Civilization and Empire: The Sources of Identity and Unity in South Asia
345(3)
The Encounter with the West: British Colonial Rule, 1757--1947
348(4)
The Rise of Nationalism and the Movement for Independence
352(2)
India's ``Third Way'': Political and Economic Development in the Cold War Era
354(13)
The Making of a Secular Nation: Political and Legal Institutions
355(3)
The Making of Indian Federalism and Center--Periphery Relations
358(3)
The Indira Gandhi Era: Populism, Patronage Politics, and the ``Emergency''
361(3)
India's ``Mixed'' Strategy of Economic Development, 1950--1984
364(3)
India Shining? Institutional Dynamics, Resilient Identities, and Evolving Interests in the Post--Cold War Era
367(17)
Stable Institutions and Coalition Politics in the World's Largest Democracy
367(6)
The Evolving Politics of Caste and Religion in Contemporary India
373(4)
Economic Liberalization in a Global Age: Achievements, Problems, and Prospects
377(5)
The Diversification of Social Forces: Labor, Women, and Environmental Groups
382(2)
Conclusion
384(2)
Key Phases in Indian Development
386(1)
Bibliography
387(2)
Important Terms
389(2)
Study Questions
391(4)
Iran
395(38)
Vali Nasr
Introduction
395(1)
The Global Context and the Rise of the Modern Iranian State
396(1)
The Reza Shah Period and the Beginnings of Development, 1921--1941
397(5)
The Democratic Interregnum, 1941--1954
402(2)
Resurrection of the Pahlavi State, 1954--1963
404(1)
Economic Growth and Authoritarianism, 1963--1979
405(6)
The Revolutionary Era, 1979--1988
411(5)
The Post-Khomeini Era, 1988--Present
416(5)
The Presidential Elections of 1997
421(4)
Conclusion
425(1)
Bibliography
426(1)
Key Phases in Iranian Development
427(1)
Important Terms
427(2)
Study Questions
429(4)
South Africa
433(38)
Michael Bratton
Introduction
433(1)
The Global Historical Context
434(2)
The Path of Development
436(2)
The Apartheid Experiment
438(3)
An Unexpected Transition
441(3)
The Socioeconomic Structure
444(2)
Contemporary Political Identities
446(3)
Contemporary Political Interests
449(3)
Democratic Political Institutions
452(4)
Bureaucratic State Institutions
456(3)
Conclusion: Consolidating Democracy?
459(3)
Bibliography
462(1)
Key Phases in the Development of South Africa
463(1)
Important Terms
464(1)
Study Questions
465(2)
Stop and Compare
467(1)
Early Developers, Middle Developers, Late Developers, and Experimental Developers
467(1)
Experimental Developers: Mexico, India, Iran, and South Africa
468(3)
Index 471

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