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The Oxford Handbook of Contextual Political Analysis

Robert E. Goodin and Charles Tilly

Price: £85.00 (Hardback)
ISBN-13: 978-0-19-927043-9
Publication date: 16 March 2006
884 pages, figures and tables in text, 246x171 mm
Series: OXFORD HANDBOOKS POL SCIENCE SERI OHPS C
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Reviews
  • 'Spanning all of the major substantive areas and approaches in modern political science, this blockbuster set is a must-have for scholars and students alike. Each volume is crafted by a distinguished set of editors who have assembled critical, comprehensive, essays to survey accumulated knowledge and emerging issues in the study of politics. These volumes will help to shape the discipline for many years to come.' - Theda Skocpol, Victor S. Thomas Professor of Government and Sociology, and Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University
  • 'Judging from the editors, contributors, and topics covered, the forthcoming Oxford Handbooks of Political Science will be a landmark series...This is a series that not only university libraries, but more specialized social science and political science libraries, will want to have on their shelves' - Robert O. Keohane, Professor of International Affairs, Princeton University
  • 'This extraordinary series offers 'state of the art' assessments that instruct, engage, and provoke. Both synoptic and directive, the fine essays across these superbly edited volumes reflect the ambitions and diversity of political science. No one who is immersed in the discipline's controversies and possibilities should miss the intellectual stimulation and critical appraisal these works so powerfully provide.' - Ira Katznelson, Ruggles Professor of Political Science and History, Columbia University
  • 'Under the general editorship of Robert E. Goodin, a large group of intellectually attractive authors has charted the entire field of political science in an unbiased multi-paradigmatic way. Minerva's owl would make a nice logo for this monumental collective work of the Oxford Handbooks: what moves us forward is looking back at what we know.' - Claus Offe, Professor of Political Science, Hertie School of Governance, Berlin and Institute for Social Science, Humboldt University, Berlin.
  • 'This volume is an invaluable intervention in the Metoden Streit agitating American social science. A detailed justification of context, it presents an array of expert witnesses who have confronted the methodological choices characteristic of different contextual fieldsplace, time, culture, ideas, etc. The intervention is judicious. While defending the particularity which context requires, it does not surrender the possibility of regularities. This methodological cornucopia, with its excellent, agenda setting introduction, will provide authoritative and stimulating guidance to the pathways of political science approaches.' - Susanne Hoeber Rudolph, William Benton Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science Emerita, University of Chicago
  • 'A paramount effort coordinated by Robert Goodin for Oxford University Press has produced an impressive set of ten volumes about the state of the discipline, the Oxford Handbook of Political Science, which has become an instant must.' - Josep Colomer's Weekly Blog
  • 'Goodin and Tilly have arrayed an outstanding group of fifty-one authors...This is a marvellous handbook into which a researcher might dip and delve. Most of the chapters provide the background needed by the curious, and some are likely to be informative to those already well versed in the area. Taken together, they offer an extensive and well-reasoned check-list of all the dangers and adventures awaiting scholars bent on explanation. The best build on cutting edge work in which the authors themselves engage.' - Margaret Levi, Political Studies Review

Description
  • Oxford Handbooks of Political Science are the essential guide to the state of political science today
  • The only fully comprehensive ten-volume survey of the whole discipline

  • Not just a review of the discipline, but a major contribution to it
  • The Oxford Handbook of Contextual Political Analysis is the largest and most systematic attempt to date to map the increasingly popular 'contextualist' approaches to political analysis
  • Ambitious in scope, it contains sections on: Philosophy, Psychology, Ideas, Culture, History, Place, Population, and Technology
  • Engagingly written by an illustrious team of international contributors
The Oxford Handbooks of Political Science is a ten-volume set of reference books offering authoritative and engaging critical overviews of the state of political science. Each volume focuses on a particular part of the discipline, with volumes on Public Policy, Political Theory, Political Economy, Contextual Political Analysis, Comparative Politics, International Relations, Law and Politics, Political Behavior, Political Institutions, and Political Methodology. The project as a whole is under the General Editorship of Robert E. Goodin, with each volume being edited by a distinguished international group of specialists in their respective fields. The books set out not just to report on the discipline, but to shape it. The series will be an indispensable point of reference for anyone working in political science and adjacent disciplines.

The Oxford Handbook of Contextual Political Analysis sets out to synthesize and critique for the first time those approaches to political science that offer a more fine-grained qualitative analysis of the political world. The work in the volume has a common aim in being sensitive to the thoughts of contextual nuances that disappear from large-scale quantitative modelling or explanations based on abstract, general, universal laws of human behavior. It shows that 'context matters' in a great many ways: philosophical context matters; psychological context matters; cultural and historical contexts matter; place, population, and technology all matter. By showcasing scholars who specialize in the analysis of all these contexts side-by-side, the Oxford Handbook of Contextual Political Analysis shows how political scientists can take those crucial contextual factors systematically into account.

Readership: Scholars and students of political science and adjacent disciplines, especially philosophy, history, sociology, geography, anthropology, demography, and psychology

Contents
Part I. Introduction
1. It Depends , Charles Tilly and Robert E. Goodin
Part II. Philosophy Matters
2. Why and How Philosophy Matters , Philip Pettit
3. The Socialization of Epistemology , Louise Antony
4. Political Ontology , Colin Hay
5. Mind, Will, and Choice , James N. Druckman and Arthur Lupia
6. Theory, Fact, Logic , Rod Aya
Part III. Psychology Matters
7. Why and How Psychology Matters , Kathleen M. McGraw
8. Motivation and Emotion , James M. Jasper
9. Social Preferences, Homo Economicus , and Zoon Politikon , Samuel Bowles and Herbert Gintis
10. Frames and Their Consequences , Francesca Polletta and M. Kai Ho
11. Memory, Individual and Collective , Aleida Assmann
Part IV. Ideas Matter
12. Why and How Ideas Matter , Dietrich Rueschemeyer
13. Detecting Ideas and Their Effects , Richard Price
14. How Previous Ideas Affect Later Ideas , Neta C. Crawford
15. How Ideas Affect Actions , Jennifer L. Hochschild
16. Mistaken Ideas and Their Effects , Lee Clarke
Part V. Culture Matters
17. Why And How Culture Matters , Michael Thompson, Marco Verweij, and Richard J. Ellis
18. How to Detect Culture and its Effects , Pamela Ballinger
19. Race, Ethnicity, Religion , Courtney Jung
20. Language, Its Stakes and Its Effects , Susan Gal
21. The Idea of Political Culture , Paul Lichterman and Daniel Cefaï
Part VI. History Matters
22. Why and How History Matters , Charles Tilly
23. Historical Knowledge and Evidence , Roberto Franzosi
24. Historical Context and Path Dependence , James Mahoney and Daniel Schensul
25. Does History Repeat? , Ruth Berins Collier and Sebastián Mazzuca
26. The Present as History , Patrick Thaddeus Jackson
Part VII. Place Matters
27. Why and How Place Matters , Göran Therborn
28. Detecting the Significance of Place , R. Bin Wong
29. Space, Place, and Time , Nigel J. Thrift
30. Spaces and Places as Sites and Objects of Politics , Javier Auyero
31. Uses of Local Knowledge , Don Kalb
Part VIII. Population Matters
32. Why and How Population Matters , David Levine
33. The Politics of Demography , Bruce Curtis
34. Politics and Mass Immigration , Gary P. Freeman
35. Population Change, Urbanization, and Political Consolidation , Jeffrey Herbst
36. Population Composition as an Object of Political Struggle , David I. Kertzer and Dominique Arel
Part IX. Technology Matters
37. Why and How Technology Matters , Wiebe E. Bijker
38. The Gendered Politics of Technology , Judy Wacjman
39. Military Technologies and Politics , Wim A. Smit
40. Technology as a Site and Object of Politics , Sheila Jasanoff
Part X. Old and New
41. Duchamp's Urinal: Who Says What's Rational When Things Get Tough? , David E. Apter
42. The Behavioral Revolution and the Remaking of Comparative Politics , Lucian Pye

Authors, editors, and contributors


Robert E. Goodin, Professor of Philosophy and Social and Political Theory at the Australian National University and
Charles Tilly, Joseph L. Buttenwieser Professor of Social Science at Columbia University

Contributors:Louise Antony, Ohio State University.
David E. Apter, Yale University.
Dominique Arel, University of Ottawa.
Aleida Assmann , University of Konstanz.
Javier Auyero, State University of New York, Stony Brook.
Rod Aya, University of Amsterdam.
Pamela Ballinger, Bowdoin College.
Wiebe E. Bijker, University of Maastricht.
Samuel Bowles, Santa Fe Institute , and University of Siena
Daniel Cefaï, University of Paris X - Nanterre.
Lee Clarke, Rutgers University.
Ruth Berins Collier, University of California, Berkeley.
Neta C. Crawford, Brown University.
Bruce Curtis, Carleton University.
James N. Druckman, University of Minnesota.
Richard J. Ellis, Willamette University.
Roberto Franzosi, University of Reading.
Gary Freeman, University of Texas, Austin.
Susan Gal, University of Chicago.
Herbert Gintis, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and Santa Fe Institute.
Robert E. Goodin , Australian National University.
Colin Hay , University of Birmingham.
Jeffrey Herbst, Princeton University.
M. Kai Ho, Columbia University.
Jennifer L. Hochschild, Harvard University.
Patrick Thaddeus Jackson, American University.
Sheila Jasanoff, Harvard University.
James M. Jasper, independent scholar
Courtney Jung, New School University.
Don Kalb, Central European University, Budapest, and Utrecht University.
David I. Kertzer, Brown University.
David Levine, University of Toronto.
Paul Lichterman, University of Southern California.
Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan.
James Mahoney, Brown University.
Sebastián Mazzuca, University of California, Berkeley.
Kathleen M. McGraw, Ohio State University.
Philip Pettit, Princeton University.
Francesca Polletta, Columbia University.
Richard Price, University of British Columbia.
Lucian Pye, MIT.
Dietrich Rueschemeyer, Brown University.
Daniel Schensul, Brown University.
Wim A. Smit, University of Twente.
Göran Therborn, Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study in the Social Sciences.
Michael Thompson, Musgrave Institute, London, and University of Bergen.
Nigel J. Thrift, Pro-Vice-Chancellor (Research), Oxford University
Charles Tilly, Columbia University.
Marco Verweij, Singapore Management University.
Judy Wacjman , Australian National University.
R. Bin Wong, University of California Lose Angeles.

Links to web resources and related information
More in the same subject area:
Population & demography
History
Philosophy
Psychology
Technology: general issues
Political science & theory
Social & cultural anthropology

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