|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Principles of Comparative Politics offers the most comprehensive
and up-to-date introduction to comparative inquiry, research, and
scholarship. In this thoroughly revised Third Edition, students now
have an even better guide to cross-national comparison and why it
matters. The new edition retains a focus on the enduring questions
with which scholars grapple, the issues about which consensus has
started to emerge, and the tools comparativists use to get at the
complex problems in the field. Updates to this edition include a
new intuitive take on statistical analyses and a clearer
explanation of how to interpret regression results; a
thoroughly-revised chapter on culture and democracy that includes a
more extensive discussion of cultural modernization theory and a
new overview of survey methods for addressing sensitive topics; and
a revised chapter on dictatorships that incorporates a
principal-agent framework for understanding authoritarian
institutions. Examples from the gender and politics literature have
been incorporated into various chapters, and empirical examples and
data on various types of institutions have been updated. The
authors have thoughtfully streamlined chapters to better focus
attention on key topics. Explore online resources:
https://edge.sagepub.com/principlescp3e
The radical interdependence between humans who live together makes
virtually all human behavior conditional. The behavior of
individuals is conditional upon the expectations of those around
them, and those expectations are conditional upon the rules
(institutions) and norms (culture) constructed to monitor, reward,
and punish different behaviors. As a result, nearly all hypotheses
about humans are conditional – conditional upon the resources
they possess, the institutions they inhabit, or the cultural
practices that tell them how to behave. Interaction Models provides
a stand-alone, accessible overview of how interaction models, which
are frequently used across the social and natural sciences, capture
the intuition behind conditional claims and context dependence. It
also addresses the simple specification and interpretation errors
that are, unfortunately, commonplace. By providing a comprehensive
and unified introduction to the use and critical evaluation of
interaction models, this book shows how they can be used to test
theoretically-derived claims of conditionality.
The radical interdependence between humans who live together makes
virtually all human behavior conditional. The behavior of
individuals is conditional upon the expectations of those around
them, and those expectations are conditional upon the rules
(institutions) and norms (culture) constructed to monitor, reward,
and punish different behaviors. As a result, nearly all hypotheses
about humans are conditional – conditional upon the resources
they possess, the institutions they inhabit, or the cultural
practices that tell them how to behave. Interaction Models provides
a stand-alone, accessible overview of how interaction models, which
are frequently used across the social and natural sciences, capture
the intuition behind conditional claims and context dependence. It
also addresses the simple specification and interpretation errors
that are, unfortunately, commonplace. By providing a comprehensive
and unified introduction to the use and critical evaluation of
interaction models, this book shows how they can be used to test
theoretically-derived claims of conditionality.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R369
Discovery Miles 3 690
|