Differences between revisions 39 and 40
Revision 39 as of 2025-04-15 22:20:33
Size: 2958
Comment: Cleanup
Revision 40 as of 2025-04-15 23:02:42
Size: 3235
Comment: Remove link
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 5: Line 5:
== Comparative Politics ==
Line 6: Line 7:
 * [[PoliticalScience/Democratization|Democratization]]
 * [[PoliticalScience/InternationalDevelopment|International Development]]
 * resources for Comparative Politics on this wiki:
   * listings of [[CategoryState|states]] and [[CategoryCityState|city-states]]
   * listings of [[CategoryEmpire|empires]] (including ''de facto'' empires)
Line 14: Line 20:

Line 22: Line 26:
== Political Parties and Movements ==
Line 23: Line 28:
These mostly fall into comparative politics, but there is some overlap with public choice theory (esp. [[PoliticalScience/InstitutionalDesign|institutional design]]).

 * [[PoliticalScience/CriticalElectionsTheory|Critical Elections Theory]]
 * [[PoliticalScience/IssuesEvolutionModel|Issues Evolution Model]]
Line 31: Line 40:



== Comparative Politics ==

 * [[PoliticalScience/Democratization|Democratization]]
 * [[PoliticalScience/InternationalDevelopment|International Development]]
 * [[PoliticalScience/PoliticalParties|Political Parties]]
 * resources for Comparative Politics on this wiki:
   * listings of [[CategoryState|states]] and [[CategoryCityState|city-states]]
   * listings of [[CategoryEmpire|empires]] (including ''de facto'' empires)

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

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

Political Parties and Movements

These mostly fall into comparative politics, but there is some overlap with public choice theory (esp. institutional design).

International Relations

Reading Notes

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


CategoryRicottone

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