|
Showing 1 - 9 of
9 matches in All Departments
This bold venture into political theory and comparative politics
combines traditional concerns about democracy with modern
analytical methods. It asks how contemporary democracies work, an
essential stage in asking how they can be justified. An answer to
both questions is found in the idea of the median mandate. The
voter in the middle - the voice of the majority - empowers the
centre party in parliament to translate his or her preferences into
public policy. The median mandate provides a unified theory of
democracy - pluralist, consensus, majoritarian, liberal, and
populist - by replacing each qualified 'vision' with an integrated
account of how representative institutions work. The unified theory
is put to the test with comprehensive cross-national evidence
covering 21 democracies from 1950 through to 1995. This exciting
book will be of interest to specialists and general readers alike,
representing as it does a reaffirmation of traditional democratic
practice in an uncertain and threatening world. Comparative
Politics is a series for students and teachers of political science
that deals with contemporary government and politics. The General
Editors are Max Kaase, Professor of Political Science, Vice
President and Dean, School of Humanities and Social Science,
International University, Bremen, Germany; and Kenneth Newton,
Professor of Comparative Politics, University of Southampton. The
series is published in association with the European Consortium for
Political Research.
|
Mapping Policy Preferences II - Estimates for Parties, Electors, and Governments in Eastern Europe, European Union, and OECD 1990-2003 (Hardcover)
Hans-Dieter Klingemann, Andrea Volkens, Judith Bara, Ian Budge, Michael D. McDonald
|
R4,377
R3,386
Discovery Miles 33 860
Save R991 (23%)
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
This book is probably the most important source of evidence
published up to now on the consolidation of democracy in Eastern
Europe. It provides estimates of party positions, voter preferences
and government policy from election programmes collected
systematically for 51 countries from 1990 onwards. Time-series are
presented in the text. This also reports party life histories
(essential to over time analyses) and provides updated and newly
validated vote statistics. All this information and much more is
available on the devoted website described in the book. The final
chapter gives instructions on how to access the data on your own
computer. For comparative purposes, similar estimates of policy and
preferences are given for CEE, OECD and EU countries. These
estimates update the prize-winning data set covered in Mapping
Policy Preferences: Estimates for Parties, Electors and Governments
1945-1998 - also published by OUP. A must-buy for all commentators,
students and analysts of democracy, in Eastern Europe and the
world.
The Manifesto data are the only comprehensive set of policy
indicators for social, economic and political research. It is thus
vital that their quality is established. The purpose of this book
is to review methodological issues that have got in the way of
straightforwardly using the Manifesto data since our two preceding
volumes were published and to resolve them in ways which best serve
users and textual analysts in general. The book is thus generally
about text-based quantitative analysis with a particular focus on
the quality of the CMP-MARPOR data and ways of assessing and using
them, In doing so the book goes beyond normal data documentation -
essential though that is - to confront the analytic issues faced by
users of the data now distributed by MARPOR. It also provides
concrete strategies for tackling these at the research level, with
examples from the field of political representation. The problems
of uncertainty, error, reliability and validity considered here are
generic issues for political analysts in any area of research, so
the book has an interest extending beyond the Manifesto estimates
themselves - in particular to other textual analyses. In addition
the book widens the range of applications introduced in our two
previous volumes and discusses the extension of the manifesto
project database to cover Latin America.
|
|