In spite of a cascade of criticism launched against the social
sciences, they have brought a qualitative improvement in method and
theory to the study of human beings and human relations. In the
process of developing now commonplace foundations of social
research few individuals have exercised a greater role in
justifying and enriching social scientific thought and practice
than Harold D. Lasswell.
Originally published in 1945 as The Analysis of Political
Behaviour, this extraordinary volume has been re-titled Legal
Education and Public Policy. The selections acknowledge Lasswell's
growing anxieties about a world of revolution, violence, and
terror, and the frailties of law in addressing such matters. That
he did so without recourse to vague and fatuous appeals to world
law and world order is an indication of how close to empirical
realities he remained. Lasswell's essays fuse the legal and moral
in the conduct of public policy. This did not deter him from
arguing the case for and ultimate benefits of democratic values as
a ground for legal thought. Lasswell singles out the interviewing
technique of the psychiatrist, what he calls "the insight
interview" in many of these essays. The Freudian world opened up
the possibilities of analysis to political scientists who, prior to
Lasswell, viewed neuroses in the leaders they studied but without
normative points to measure their own biases.
Lasswell's essays serve as a landmark in accelerating rapid
advance in social science research. It allowed for the evolution of
political behavior that has catapulted the field to a major
dimension of political science studies in leadership and mass
persuasion.
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