This collection of original essays focuses on the relationship
of social scientists to the state and public policy in the
industrialized democracies. The comparative approach of this book
provides the basis for broader generalization about the linkages
between social science and social scientist and the modern state
and political power. Social Scientists, Policy, and the State
brings fresh analysis to specific issues that are important to a
more general understanding of these linkages.
Part I examines the ways in which social scientists participate
in the policy-making process. Part II looks at the uses made of
ideas generated by social scientific research and at variations
within and relations between the critical and expert roles of the
social scientist. Part III discusses the factors that have
contributed to change in the relationship of social scientists to
power and to the state. This section also includes a detailed
discussion about the cultural and structural conditions that
facilitate or block the political influence of social scientists.
This book should have equal appeal to teachers and researchers in
the fields of comparative politics, policy making, and the
sociology of knowledge.
General
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