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This book offers the first political theory of special purpose
jurisdictions, including 35,000 special districts and 13,500 school
districts, which constitute the most common form of local
government in the United States today. Collectively, special
purpose governments have more civilian employees than the federal
government and spend more than all city governments combined. The
proliferation of special purpose jurisdictions has fundamentally
altered the nature of representation and taxation in local
government. Citizens today are commonly represented by dozens - in
some cases hundreds - of local officials in multiple layers of
government. As a result, political participation in local elections
is low and special interest groups associated with each function
exert disproportionate influence. With multiple special-interest
governments tapping the same tax base, the local tax base takes on
the character of a common-pool resource, leading to familiar
problems of overexploitation. Strong political parties can often
mitigate the common-pool problem by informally coordinating the
policies of multiple overlapping governments.
A clear and comprehensive framework for bridging the widening gap
between theorists and empiricists in social science The credibility
revolution, with its emphasis on empirical methods for causal
inference, has led to concerns among scholars that the canonical
questions about politics and society are being neglected because
they are no longer deemed answerable. Theory and Credibility stakes
out an opposing view-presenting a new vision of how, working
together, the credibility revolution and formal theory can advance
social scientific inquiry. This authoritative book covers the
conceptual foundations and practicalities of both model building
and research design, providing a new framework to link theory and
empirics. Drawing on diverse examples from political science, it
presents a typology of the rich set of interactions that are
possible between theory and empirics. This typology opens up new
ways for scholars to make progress on substantive questions, and
enables researchers from disparate traditions to gain a deeper
appreciation for each other's work and why it matters. Theory and
Credibility shows theorists how to create models that are genuinely
useful to empirical inquiry, and helps empiricists better
understand how to structure their research in ways that speak to
theoretically meaningful questions.
This book offers the first political theory of special purpose
jurisdictions, including 35,000 special districts and 13,500 school
districts, which constitute the most common form of local
government in the United States today. Collectively, special
purpose governments have more civilian employees than the federal
government and spend more than all city governments combined. The
proliferation of special purpose jurisdictions has fundamentally
altered the nature of representation and taxation in local
government. Citizens today are commonly represented by dozens - in
some cases hundreds - of local officials in multiple layers of
government. As a result, political participation in local elections
is low and special interest groups associated with each function
exert disproportionate influence. With multiple special-interest
governments tapping the same tax base, the local tax base takes on
the character of a common-pool resource, leading to familiar
problems of overexploitation. Strong political parties can often
mitigate the common-pool problem by informally coordinating the
policies of multiple overlapping governments.
A clear and comprehensive framework for bridging the widening gap
between theorists and empiricists in social science The credibility
revolution, with its emphasis on empirical methods for causal
inference, has led to concerns among scholars that the canonical
questions about politics and society are being neglected because
they are no longer deemed answerable. Theory and Credibility stakes
out an opposing view-presenting a new vision of how, working
together, the credibility revolution and formal theory can advance
social scientific inquiry. This authoritative book covers the
conceptual foundations and practicalities of both model building
and research design, providing a new framework to link theory and
empirics. Drawing on diverse examples from political science, it
presents a typology of the rich set of interactions that are
possible between theory and empirics. This typology opens up new
ways for scholars to make progress on substantive questions, and
enables researchers from disparate traditions to gain a deeper
appreciation for each other's work and why it matters. Theory and
Credibility shows theorists how to create models that are genuinely
useful to empirical inquiry, and helps empiricists better
understand how to structure their research in ways that speak to
theoretically meaningful questions.
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