000 03107cam a22003015a 4500
001 17142616
005 20151110105642.0
008 120131s2012 enk frb f001 0 eng d
020 _a9780521765169 (hardback)
020 _a9780521758383 (paperback)
040 _aDLC
_beng
_cDLC
_dDLC
_dEG-ScBUE
082 0 4 _a320.3
_222
_bHIS
100 1 _aHislope, Robert.
_938705
245 1 0 _aIntroduction to comparative politics :
_bthe state and its challenges /
_cRobert Hislope, Anthony Mughan.
260 _aCambridge ;
_aNew York :
_bCambridge University Press,
_c2012.
300 _axiv, 331 p. ;
_c26 cm.
500 _aIndex : p. 323-331.
504 _aBibliography : p. 305-321.
505 8 _aMachine generated contents note: 1. The modern state; 2. States and politics; 3. How governments work; 4. Frameworks of governance; 5. Linkage and representation; 6. Globalization; 7. Ethnic nationalism; 8. Terrorism; 9. Organized crime; 10. Conclusion.
520 _a"This stimulating and accessible introduction to comparative politics offers a fresh perspective on the fundamentals of political science. Its central theme is the enduring political significance of the modern state despite severe challenges to its sovereignty. There are three main sections to the book. The first traces the origins and meaning of the state and proceeds to explore its relationship to the practice of politics. The second examines how states are governed and compares patterns of governance found in the two major regime types in the world today, democracy and authoritarianism. The last section discusses several contemporary challenges - globalization, ethnic nationalism, terrorism and organized crime - to state sovereignty. Designed to appeal to students and professors alike, this lively text engages readers as it traces states' struggles against the mutually reinforcing pressures of global economic and political interdependence, fragmented identities and secessionism, transnational criminal networks, and terrorism"--
520 _a"This book is about states and the challenges to sovereignty they face in the contemporary world. We address this issue by systematically comparing states around the globe. As such, this book represents a contribution to comparative politics, which is a core subfield within the academic discipline of political science. (The other subfields include international relations, political theory, and American politics.) The object of study of comparative politics is the domestic, or internal, politics of states. Unlike other fields in the social sciences, comparative politics also offers a method in its very name -- comparison. Thus, a "comparativist" is one who observes similarities and differences among states, develops theoretical explanations for them, and then seeks to test these explanations against new cases. What one searches for depends on the questions one asks"--
650 0 _aComparative government.
_2BUEsh
650 0 _aState, The.
_2BUEsh
653 _bBUSBOL
_cNovember2015
655 _vReading book
_934232
700 1 _aMughan, Anthony.
942 _2ddc
999 _c21022
_d20994