Information about Comparative Politics
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Sometimes, especially in the United States, the term "comparative politics" is used to refer to "the politics of foreign countries". This usage of the term however should be considered incorrect.[2]
The comparative method
The comparative method is - together with the experimental method, the statistical method and the case study approach - one of the four fundamental scientific methods which can be used to test the validity of general empirical propositions,[3] i.e. to establish empirical relationships among two or more variables while all other variables are held constant.[4] In particular, the comparative method is generally used when neither the experimental nor the statistical method can be employed: on the one hand, experiments can only rarely be conducted in political science;[5] on the other hand the statistical method implies the mathematical manipulation of quantitative data about a large number of cases, while sometimes political research must be conducted by analysing the behaviour of qualitative variables in a small number of cases.[6] The case study approach cannot be considered a scientific method according to the above definition, however it can be useful to gain knowledge about single cases, which can then be put to comparison according to the comparative method.[7]Comparative strategies
Several different strategies can be used in comparative research.[8]- Most Similar Systems Design/Mill's Method of Difference: it consists in comparing very similar cases which only differ in the dependent variable, on the assumption that this would make it easier to find those independent variables which explain the presence/absence of the dependent variable.
- Most Different Systems Design/Mill's Method of Similarity: it consists in comparing very different cases, all of which however have in common the same dependent variable, so that any other circumstance which is present in all the cases can be regarded as the independent variable.
Some major works in comparative politics
- Aristotle: In his work The Politics, Aristotle compares different "constitutions", by introducing a famous typology based on two criteria: the number of rulers (one, few, many) and the nature of the political regime (good or corrupt). Thus he distinguishes six different kinds of "constitutions": monarchy, aristocracy, and polity (good types), versus tyranny, oligarchy and democracy (corrupt types).
- Montesquieu:
- Alexis de Tocqueville: Democracy in America
- Seymour Martin Lipset:
- Barrington Moore: In Social Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy: Lord and Peasant in the Making of the Modern World (1966) Moore compares revolutions in countries like England, Russia and Japan (among others). His thesis is that mass-led revolutions dispossess the landed elite and result in Communism, and that revolutions by the elite result in Fascism. It is thus only revolutions by the bourgeoisie that result in democratic governance. For the outlier case of India, practices of the Mogul Empire, British Imperial rule and the Caste System are cited.
- Samuel P. Huntington:
- Robert A. Dahl:
- Arend Lijphart: Patterns of Democracy (1999), an unrivaled, comprehensive study of democracies around the world.
- Giovanni Sartori:
- Theda Skocpol: In States and Social Revolutions: A Comparative Analysis of France, Russia, and China Theda Skocpol compares the major revolutions of France, Russia and China: three basically similar events which took place in three very different contexts. Skopcol's purpose is to find possible similarities which might help explain the phenomenon of political revolution. From this point of view, this work represents a good example of a research conducted according to the Most Different Systems Design.
See also
- Political Science
- Comparative government
- Politics of Australia and Canada compared
- Politics of Australia and New Zealand compared
- Canadian and American politics compared
References
1. ^ Lijphart, A. (1971) "Comparative Politics and the Comparative Method", in American Political Science Review, vol. 65, no. 3, p. 682
2. ^ Hopkin, J. [2002 (1995)] "Comparative Methods", in Marsh, D. and G. Stoker (ed.) Theory and Methods in Political Science, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 249-250
3. ^ Lijphart, A. (1971), cit., p. 682
4. ^ Lijphart, A. (1971), cit., p. 683
5. ^ Hopkin, J. [2002 (1995)], cit., p. 250
6. ^ It should be noted however that, as Lijphart points out in the article cited above, the experimental and statistical methods share the same logic as the comparative method: they all imply a comparison between cases which differ on the variable which is being studied, while remaining identical on all the other possible variables.
7. ^ Lijphart, A. (1971), cit., p. 691
8. ^ [1]
2. ^ Hopkin, J. [2002 (1995)] "Comparative Methods", in Marsh, D. and G. Stoker (ed.) Theory and Methods in Political Science, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 249-250
3. ^ Lijphart, A. (1971), cit., p. 682
4. ^ Lijphart, A. (1971), cit., p. 683
5. ^ Hopkin, J. [2002 (1995)], cit., p. 250
6. ^ It should be noted however that, as Lijphart points out in the article cited above, the experimental and statistical methods share the same logic as the comparative method: they all imply a comparison between cases which differ on the variable which is being studied, while remaining identical on all the other possible variables.
7. ^ Lijphart, A. (1971), cit., p. 691
8. ^ [1]
External links
Comparative Methods in Political & Social Research: useful resources from Prof. David Levi-Faur's course at the University of Haifa...... Click the link for more information.
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