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'''Political science''' is best defined in comparison to [[PoliticalPhilosophy|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''.
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== Comparative Politics ==
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== Political Philosophy == Pretty much everything where states are the unit of analysis.
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 * [[PoliticalSceince/Pluralism|Pluralism]]  * [[PoliticalScience/CityPolitics|City Politics]]
 * [[PoliticalScience/Democratization|Democratization]]
 * [[PoliticalScience/InternationalDevelopment|International Development]]
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== Political Parties and Movements ==
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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/IssuesEvolutionModel|Issues Evolution Model]]
 * [[PoliticalScience/PartyPolarization|Party Polarization]]
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Public choice and social choice are highly interconnected. In general, public choice seeks to be strictly positive, while social choice leans into [[PoliticalPhilosophy|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.

 * [[PoliticalScience/InstitutionalDesign|Institutional Design]]
 * [[PoliticalScience/MedianVoterTheorem|Median Voter Theorem]]
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 * [[PoliticalScience/RationalChoiceVoting|Rational choice voting]]
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 * [[PoliticalScience/Outbidding|Outbidding]]
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 * [[PoliticalScience/ConflictTheory|Conflict theory]]
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 * [[PoliticalScience/RallyAroundTheFlagEffect|Rally around the flag effect]]
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== Miscellany ==
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== Comparative Politics ==

 * resources for Comparative Politics on this wiki:
 * [[PoliticalScience/AffectivePolarization|Affective Polarization]]
 * [[PoliticalScience/GiniCoefficient|Gini coefficient]]
 * [[PoliticalScience/SouthernExceptionalism|Southern exceptionalism]]
 * Some resources on this wiki:
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 * [[WhoGoverns|Who Governs? Democracy and Power in an American City]], Robert Dahl, 1961
 * [[TheCalculusOfConsent|The Calculus of Consent]], James M. Buchanon and Gordon Tullock, 1962
 * [[Autocracy]], Gordon Tullock, 1987
Note: reading notes for the above topics are listed on the respective pages, ''not here''.

 * [[EnglandInTheAgeOfTheAmericanRevolution|England in the Age of the American Revolution]], Lewis Namier, 1931
 * [[ExitVoiceAndLoyalty|Exit, Voice, and Loyalty: Responses to Decline in Firms, Organizations, and States]], Albert O. Hirschman, 1970
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 * [[InternationalHumanRightsLawAndPracticeInLatinAmerica|International Human Rights Law and Practice in Latin America]], Ellen Lutz and Kathryn Sikkink, 2000
 * [[TheTragedyOfGreatPowerPolitics|The Tragedy of Great Power Politics]], John J. Mearsheimer, 2014 (2nd ed.)
 * [[CityDiplomacy|City Diplomacy: From City-States to Global Cities]], Raffaele Marchetti, 2021
 * [[EpistemicSuperimposition|Epistemic superimposition: the war in Ukraine and the poverty of expertise in international relations theory]], Jan Dutkiewicz and Jan Smolenski, in Journal of International Relations and Development (2023)
 * [[ToHelpEndWarInUkraineTheQuadShouldBackIndiaToEngageRussia|To help end war in Ukraine, the Quad should back India to engage Russia]], Adarsh Badri, 2023
 * [[MeasuringInternalPoliticalEfficacyInThe1988NationalElectionStudy|Measuring Internal Political Efficacy in the 1988 National Election Study]]; Richard G. Niemi, Stephen C. Craig, and Franco Mattei; 2014
 * [[RacialConflictInGlobalSociety|Racial Conflict in Global Society]], John Stone and Polly Rizova, 2014
 * [[EconomicSanctionsAsAForeignPolicyTool|Economic Sanctions as a Foreign Policy Tool]], Michael Klein and Daniel W. Drezner, 2024
 * [[PoliticiansTheoriesOfVotingBehavior|Politicians’ Theories of Voting Behavior]]; Jack Lucas, Lior Sheffer, Peter John Loewen, Stefaan Walgrave, Karolin Soontjens, Eran Amsalem, Stefanie Bailer, Nathalie Brack, Christian Breunig, Pirmin Bundi, Linda Coufal, Patrick Dumont, Sarah Lachance, Miguel M. Pereira, Mikael Persson, Jean-benoit Pilet, Anne Rasmussen, Maj-britt Sterba, and Frédéric Varone; 2024
 * [[UnconditionalLoyalty|Unconditional Loyalty: The Survival of Minority Autocracies]], Salam Alsaadi, 2025
 * [[ThePoliticsOfSmallBusinessOwners|The Politics of Small Business Owners]]; Neil Malhotra, Yotam Margalit, and Saikun Shi; 2025
 * [[WhatOneMineralRevealsAboutTheUSChinaTradeWar|What One Mineral Reveals About the U.S.-China Trade War]], Miles Kellerman, 2025

== Data Notes ==

 * Relevant government agencies, which link to many data notes:
   * [[UnitedStates/BureauOfJusticeStatistics|BJS]]
   * [[UnitedStates/BureauOfLaborStatistics|BLS]]
   * [[UnitedStates/CensusBureau|Census Bureau]]
 * [[AliceProject|ALICE Project]]
 * [[AmericanNationalElectionStudies|ANES]]
 * [[UnitedStates/CentralIntelligenceAgency/WorldFactbook|CIA World Factbook]]
 * [[ComparativeStudyOfElectoralSystems|CSES]]
 * [[EuropeanElectionStudies|EES]]
 * [[EuropeanSocialSurvey|ESS]]
 * [[FreedomInTheWorld|Freedom House's Freedom in the World]]
 * [[GeneralSocialSurvey|GSS]]
 * [[InternationalSocialSurveyProgramme|ISSP]]
 * [[MostImportantProblemDataset|MIPD]]
 * [[Polity]]
 * [[VarietiesOfDemocracy|V-Dem]]
 * [[WorldGovernanceIndicatorsProject|WGI]]
 * [[WorldValuesSurvey|WVS]]

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

Pretty much everything where states are the unit of analysis.

Political Parties and Movements

Comparative politics methods applied to non-states. There is some overlap with public choice theory (esp. institutional design).

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 2025-11-01 17:37:37 by DominicRicottone)