Differences between revisions 101 and 105 (spanning 4 versions)
Revision 101 as of 2026-02-13 03:51:13
Size: 9093
Comment: Link
Revision 105 as of 2026-02-13 15:46:11
Size: 8983
Comment: Removed link
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 7: Line 7:
Pretty much everything where states are the unit of analysis. This field's methods are essentially [[Statistics/DecisionTrees|decision trees]]. The body of quantitative data is poor. Analysis rests on identifying novel partitions that better predict or describe outcomes, and then re-testing hypotheses after a few decades have generated new data.
Line 9: Line 9:
 * [[PoliticalScience/CityPolitics|City Politics]]  * [[PoliticalScience/CityPolitics|City politics]]
 * [[PoliticalScience/CriticalElectionsTheory|Critical elections theory]]
Line 11: Line 12:
 * [[PoliticalScience/InternationalDevelopment|International Development]]

== Political Parties and Movements ==

Comparative politics methods applied to non-states. There is some overlap with public choice theory (esp. [[PoliticalScience/InstitutionalDesign|institutional design]]).

 * [[PoliticalScience/CriticalElectionsTheory|Critical elections theory]]
 * [[PoliticalScience/ElectoralSystems|Electoral systems]]
 * [[PoliticalScience/GiniCoefficient|Gini coefficient]]
 * [[PoliticalScience/InternationalDevelopment|International development]]
Line 20: Line 17:
 * [[PoliticalScience/RelativeDeprivationTheory|Relative deprivation theory]]
 * [[PoliticalScience/SouthernExceptionalism|Southern exceptionalism]]
Line 50: Line 49:
 * [[PoliticalScience/GiniCoefficient|Gini coefficient]]
Line 52: Line 50:
 * [[PoliticalScience/SouthernExceptionalism|Southern exceptionalism]]
Line 54: Line 51:
   * listings of [[CategoryState|states]] and [[CategoryCityState|city-states]]    * listings of [[CategoryState|states]] and [[CategoryCityState|city-states]] throughout history
   * listings of current [[CategoryCity|cities]]
Line 64: Line 62:
 * [[JapanIn1994|Japan in 1994: Out with the Old, in with the New?]], Michael Blaker, 1995
Line 69: Line 66:
 * [[UrbanResilienceAndTheRecoveryOfNewOrleans|Urban Resilience and the Recovery of New Orleans]], Thomas J. Campanella, 2006
Line 72: Line 68:
 * [[RacialConflictInGlobalSociety|Racial Conflict in Global Society]], John Stone and Polly Rizova, 2014

Political Science

Political science is best defined in comparison to political philosophy: one attempts to understand politics from first principles, reasoned outward, in a coherent and consistent theory; the other attempts to understand politics from observations and theories of what explains the variance therein. This page addresses the latter.

Comparative Politics

This field's methods are essentially decision trees. The body of quantitative data is poor. Analysis rests on identifying novel partitions that better predict or describe outcomes, and then re-testing hypotheses after a few decades have generated new data.

Public Choice and Social Choice Theory

Public choice and social choice are highly interconnected. In general, public choice seeks to be strictly positive, while social choice leans into philosophy and normative study. Like, 'given a voting system, which agent has most control' vs. 'what is the most fair voting system'. But the theorists fundamentally speak the same language, and it's more coherent to group them together by field of study.

Political Economy

International Relations

Miscellany

Reading Notes

Note: reading notes for the above topics are listed on the respective pages, not here.

Data Notes


CategoryRicottone

PoliticalScience (last edited 2026-02-13 15:46:11 by DominicRicottone)