Comparative politics: interests, identities, and institutions in a changing global order
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Format: | Buch |
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Sprache: | English |
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New York
Cambridge Univ. Press
2009
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Ausgabe: | 3. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXI, 624 S. Kt. |
ISBN: | 9780521708401 |
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adam_text | Titel: Comparative politics
Autor: Kopstein, Jeffrey
Jahr: 2009
Contents
List ofMaps page xvii
Preface to Third Edition xix
List of Contributors xxi
One. What Is Comparative Politics? 1
Jeffrey Kopstein and Mark Lichbach
Introduction 1
Comparative Politics and Political Science 2
How Comparativists Practice Their Craft: Concepts and Methods 4
Regime Types 4
Tools of Analysis: Interests, Identities, and Institutions 4
Comparative Politics and Developmental Paths 8
A Changing Field 8
Paths of Development 10
Why Study Comparative Politics? 13
Two. The Framework of Analysis 16
Jeffrey Kopstein and Mark Lichbach
Introduction 16
Global Context 16
Nations and States 17
Globalization and Heterogeneities 18
Local Heterogeneities 19
World-Historical Time and Conflicts among States 21
Domestic Interests, Identities, and Institutions 22
Interests 22
Identities 24
Institutions 26
Institutions as Consequences (ofthe Global Context) and as
Causes (of Interests and Identities) 27
Interests and Identities, and the Struggle over Institutions 28
CONTENTS
Developmental Paths to the Modern World 29
Comparative-Politics Feedback 32
International-Relations Feedback 33
Our Approach to Comparison 35
Conclusion 36
PART ONE. EARLY DEVELOPERS
Three. Britain 41
Peter Rutland
Introduction 41
The British Model 42
The Long Road from Empire to Europe 44
An Island Nation 44
The End of Empire 44
The Reluctant European 46
Who Are the British? Contested Identities 47
Forging a British Nation 48
The Irish Question 50
A Multicultural Britain 52
British Political Institutions 54
The Path to Parliamentary Democracy 55
The House of Commons 56
From Cabinet to Prime Ministerial Government 57
The Electoral System 59
Political Behavior 62
The Dignified Constitution 63
Rival Interests and the Evolution of British Democracy 64
The Rights Tradition 65
The Impact of Industrialization 66
Labour s Rise to Power 68
The Postwar Consensus 69
Thatcher to the Rescue? 1
The Fall of Thatcher 3
The Rise of New Labour 4
Blair at the Helm 77
Conclusion 81
BIBLIOGRAPHY
KEY PHASES IN BRITAIN S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT
IMPORTANT TERMS
STUDY QUESTIONS
82
83
83
85
Four. France 87
Laurence McFalls
Introduction °7
The Medieval Origins of the French State
89
CONTENTS xi
Absolutism and the Origins of Contemporary French Institutions,
Interests, and Identity 91
The French Revolution 94
Nineteenth-Century France in Search of Stable Institutions
and Identity 100
France s Third Republic and Social Stalemate 103
From the Front populaire to the Vichy State 106
From Liberation to the Brink of Civil War 109
France s Fifth Republic: A Stable Democratic Institutional Order? 112
France without de Gaulle: Democratic Consolidation or
Lack of Leadership? 117
Conclusion: French Interests, Institutions, and Identity in
the Face of European Integration and Globalization 124
BIBLIOGRAPHY 129
KEY PHASES IN FRANCE S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 130
IMPORTANT TERMS 131
STUDY QUESTIONS 133
STOP AND COMPARE 135
Early Developers: Britain and France 135
PARTTWO. MIDDLE DEVELOPERS
Five. Germany 141
Andrew C. Gould
Introduction 141
Origins of a Middle Developer, 100 b.c.-A.d. 1800 142
Competing Modern States, 1800-1871 143
Unification under Authoritarian Leadership, 1871-1919 146
Democracy and Competitive Capitalism, 1919-1933 149
Nazism in Power, 1933-1945 151
Occupation (1945-1949), Division (1949-1990), and
Unification (1990-) 153
Interests in Contemporary Germany 153
Identities in Contemporary Germany 156
Institutions in Contemporary Germany 160
Germany s Post-World War II Developmental Path 171
BIBLIOGRAPHY 174
KEY PHASES IN GERMANY S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 175
IMPORTANT TERMS 176
STUDY QUESTIONS 179
Six. Japan 181
Miranda A. Schreurs
Introduction 181
The Geography of Japan 182
xii CONTENTS
The Historical Roots of Institutions, Identities, and Interests 183
Tokugawa Japan, 1603-1867 183
The Meiji Era, 1868-1912 184
A Brief Interlude with Democracy: The Taisho Democracy,
1918-1932 186
Japan as a Military Power and a Colonial Force 186
Occupation of Japan 188
The Japanese Constitution and the Establishment of a
New Political Order 189
The Reverse Course and Japan s Emergence as a Key U.S. Ally 190
Understanding Japan s Economic Miracle 192
Opposition to the Conservative Agenda 195
The Politics of Reform 197
Economic Reform 197
Political Reform 199
Carving out a New International Role and Vision for Japan
in a Changing Global Order 202
Conclusion 205
BIBLIOGRAPHY 206
KEY PHASES IN lAPAN S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 207
IMPORTANT TERMS 208
STUDY QUESTIONS 209
STOP AND COMPARE 211
Early Developers and Middle Developers 211
Middle Developers: Germany and Japan 211
PARTTHREE. LATE DEVELOPERS
Seven. Russia 219
Stephen E. Hanson
Introduction 219
The Rise and Fall of the USSR 220
From Marx to Lenin 220
From Lenin to Stalin 226
From Stalin to Gorbachev 234
Interests, Identities, and Institutions in Postcommunist Russia 241
The Leninist Legacy and Post-Soviet Interests 241
Yeltsin and the Design of Post-Soviet Institutions 244
The Putin Era 253
Institutions, Interests, and the Search for a New Russian Identity 260
KEY PHASES IN RUSSIA S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 262
BIBLIOGRAPHY 263
IMPORTANT TERMS 264
STUDY QUESTIONS 267
CONTENTS xiii
Eight. China 271
Yu-ShanWu
Introduction 271
Historical Background 273
Developmental Stages of the Communist Regime 279
The Maoist Period: Totalitarianism 281
Deng Unleashes Reform 287
Jiang Zemin, Hu Jintao, and Neoconservatism 293
Will China Become Democratic? 299
BIBLIOGRAPHY 302
KEY PHASES IN CHINA S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 303
IMPORTANT TERMS 304
STUDY QUESTIONS 310
STOP AND COMPARE 311
Early Developers, Middle Developers, and Late Developers 311
Late Developers: Russia and China 311
PART FOUR. EXPERIMENTAL DEVELOPERS
Nine. Mexico 319
Anthony Gill
Introduction 319
Historical, Social, and Ideological Origins 321
The Colonial Period 322
From Independence to Revolution 324
Independence and the Era of the Caudillos 324
The Ascendancy of Liberalism 327
The Porfiriato 329
Politics in the Twentieth Century: Revolution and Institutionalized
Rule 330
The Mexican Revolution 330
The Revolution Institutionalized 332
The Formal Institutional Structure of Mexican Politics 336
The Crisis of Corporatism during the Late Twentieth Century 337
Origins of the Crisis 338
Political Challenges in the 1980s and 1990s 340
The Political Consequences of Economic Crisis 341
Interests, Identities, and Institutions at the End ofthe Twentieth
Century 342
Competitive Democracy in Twenty-First-Century Mexico 349
Conclusion 355
KEY PHASES IN MEXICO S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 357
BIBLIOGRAPHY 359
IMPORTANT TERMS 360
STUDY QUESTIONS 363
Xjv CONTENTS
Ten. India 367
Rudra Sil
Introduction 367
Pre-Independence India: Civilization and Empire to Colonialism
and Nationalism 369
Civilization and Empire: The Sources of Identity and Unity in
South Asia 369
The Encounter with the West: British Colonial Rule, 1757-1947 373
The Rise of Nationalism and the Movement for Independence 376
India s Third Way : Political and Economic Development
in the Cold War Era 378
The Making of a Secular Nation: Political and Legal Institutions 379
The Making of Indian Federalism and Center-Periphery Relations 383
The Indira Gandhi Era: Populism, Patronage Politics, and the
Emergency 385
India s Mixed Strategy of Economic Development, 1950-1984 388
India Shining? Institutional Dynamics, Resilient Identities,
and Evolving Interests in the Post-Cold War Era 391
Stable Institutions and Coalition Politics in the World s Largest
Democracy 392
The Evolving Politics of Caste and Religion in Contemporary
India 397
Economic Liberalization in a Global Age: Achievements,
Problems, and Prospects 402
The Diversification of Social Forces: Labor, Women, and
Environmental Groups 407
Conclusion 409
BIBLIOGRAPHY 411
KEY PHASES IN INDIA S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 414
IMPORTANT TERMS 414
STUDY QUESTIONS 417
Eleven. Iran 419
Vali Nasr
Introduction 419
The Global Context and the Rise of the Modern Iranian State 420
The Reza Shah Period and the Beginnings of Development, 1921-1941 421
The Democratic Interregnum, 1941-1954 426
Resurrection ofthe Pahlavi State, 1954-1963 428
Economic Growth and Authoritarianism, 1963-1979 429
The Revolutionary Era, 1979-1988 435
The Post-Khomeini Era, 1988-Present 441
The Presidential Elections of 1997 445
The Presidential Elections of 2005 449
Conclusion 453
BIBLIOGRAPHY 454
CONTENTS XV
KEY PHASES IN IRAN S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 455
IMPORTANT TERMS 456
STUDY QUESTIONS 457
Twelve. South Africa 461
Michael Bratton
Introduction 461
The Global Historical Context 462
The Path of Development 464
The Apartheid Experiment 466
An Unexpected Transition 469
The Socioeconomic Structure 472
Contemporary Political Identities 474
Contemporary Political Interests 477
Democratic Political Institutions 480
Bureaucratic State Institutions 484
Conclusion: Consolidating Democracy? 488
BIBLIOGRAPHY 491
KEY PHASES IN SOUTH AFRICA S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 492
IMPORTANT TERMS 493
STUDY QUESTIONS 494
Thirteen. The European Union 497
Paulette Kurzer
Introduction 497
The Origins of Regional Integration 498
Evolution of the European Union 500
The Institutions 505
The Commission 506
The Council 507
The European Court of Justice 510
The European Parliament 512
Interests 515
What Has Been Accomplished 518
The Common Agricultural Policy 518
The Single European Market 519
A Single Currency 521
Conclusion: Future Challenges 524
BIBLIOGRAPHY 527
KEY PHASES IN THE EUROPEAN UNION S POLITICAL
DEVELOPMENT 528
IMPORTANT TERMS 529
STUDY QUESTIONS 532
Fourteen. Nigeria 535
Okechukwu Iheduru
Introduction 535
xvi CONTENTS
Social and Historical Origins 536
Conquest and Colonialism: The Sources of Identity and Unity in
Nigeria 536
Colonial Legacies: Emerging Interests, Identities, and Institutions 537
Nationalism and the Anticolonial Movement 539
From Independence to the Fall of the First Republic 541
Federalism and the Quest for Unity in Diversity 541
Ethnicity, Patronage Politics, and Party Politics 542
Military Intervention and the Biafran War of Secession 546
The Rise of Military Federalism and the Oil Boom Era 548
Military Rule, Prebendalism, and the Curse of Black Gold
(1970-1979) 548
Mixed Economy and State-Mediated Capital Accumulation 551
The Second Republic (1979-1983) 553
The Return of Military Dictatorships and Transition without
End (1983-1998) 555
The Return to Democracy and the Fourth Republic 561
Institutions and Elite Coalition Politics 561
The Politics of Resource Control 564
Population Count, Ethnic Mobilization, and Insurgency
Movements 564
Federalism, Federal Character, and the Politics of Zoning 566
Economic Reforms and the Politics of Development and
Deindustrialization 567
Corruption: Fighting the Canker Worm in the Social Fabric 569
Poverty, Unemployment, and General Insecurity 571
From the Third-Term Plot Debacle to a Strengthened Presidency 572
The 2007 Elections and Nigerian Politics in the Twenty-First Century 574
Interests, Institutions, and the 2007 Flawed Elections 574
The Judiciary: Compromised and Resilient 576
What Future for an Epileptic Giant? 579
KEY PHASES IN NIGERIA S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 581
BIBLIOGRAPHY 583
IMPORTANT TERMS 584
STUDY QUESTIONS 587
STOP AND COMPARE 589
Early Developers, Middle Developers, Late Developers, and
Experimental Developers 589
Experimental Developers: Mexico, India, Iran, South Africa,
the European Union, and Nigeria 590
Index 593
|
adam_txt |
Titel: Comparative politics
Autor: Kopstein, Jeffrey
Jahr: 2009
Contents
List ofMaps page xvii
Preface to Third Edition xix
List of Contributors xxi
One. What Is Comparative Politics? 1
Jeffrey Kopstein and Mark Lichbach
Introduction 1
Comparative Politics and Political Science 2
How Comparativists Practice Their Craft: Concepts and Methods 4
Regime Types 4
Tools of Analysis: Interests, Identities, and Institutions 4
Comparative Politics and Developmental Paths 8
A Changing Field 8
Paths of Development 10
Why Study Comparative Politics? 13
Two. The Framework of Analysis 16
Jeffrey Kopstein and Mark Lichbach
Introduction 16
Global Context 16
Nations and States 17
Globalization and Heterogeneities 18
Local Heterogeneities 19
World-Historical Time and Conflicts among States 21
Domestic Interests, Identities, and Institutions 22
Interests 22
Identities 24
Institutions 26
Institutions as Consequences (ofthe Global Context) and as
Causes (of Interests and Identities) 27
Interests and Identities, and the Struggle over Institutions 28
CONTENTS
Developmental Paths to the Modern World 29
Comparative-Politics Feedback 32
International-Relations Feedback 33
Our Approach to Comparison 35
Conclusion 36
PART ONE. EARLY DEVELOPERS
Three. Britain 41
Peter Rutland
Introduction 41
The British Model 42
The Long Road from Empire to Europe 44
An Island Nation 44
The End of Empire 44
The Reluctant European 46
Who Are the British? Contested Identities 47
Forging a British Nation 48
The Irish Question 50
A Multicultural Britain 52
British Political Institutions 54
The Path to Parliamentary Democracy 55
The House of Commons 56
From Cabinet to Prime Ministerial Government 57
The Electoral System 59
Political Behavior 62
The Dignified Constitution 63
Rival Interests and the Evolution of British Democracy 64
The Rights Tradition 65
The Impact of Industrialization 66
Labour's Rise to Power 68
The Postwar Consensus 69
Thatcher to the Rescue? ' 1
The Fall of Thatcher '3
The Rise of New Labour '4
Blair at the Helm 77
Conclusion 81
BIBLIOGRAPHY
KEY PHASES IN BRITAIN'S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT
IMPORTANT TERMS
STUDY QUESTIONS
82
83
83
85
Four. France 87
Laurence McFalls
Introduction °7
The Medieval Origins of the French State
89
CONTENTS xi
Absolutism and the Origins of Contemporary French Institutions,
Interests, and Identity 91
The French Revolution 94
Nineteenth-Century France in Search of Stable Institutions
and Identity 100
France's Third Republic and Social Stalemate 103
From the Front populaire to the Vichy State 106
From Liberation to the Brink of Civil War 109
France's Fifth Republic: A Stable Democratic Institutional Order? 112
France without de Gaulle: Democratic Consolidation or
Lack of Leadership? 117
Conclusion: French Interests, Institutions, and Identity in
the Face of European Integration and Globalization 124
BIBLIOGRAPHY 129
KEY PHASES IN FRANCE'S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 130
IMPORTANT TERMS 131
STUDY QUESTIONS 133
STOP AND COMPARE 135
Early Developers: Britain and France 135
PARTTWO. MIDDLE DEVELOPERS
Five. Germany 141
Andrew C. Gould
Introduction 141
Origins of a Middle Developer, 100 b.c.-A.d. 1800 142
Competing Modern States, 1800-1871 143
Unification under Authoritarian Leadership, 1871-1919 146
Democracy and Competitive Capitalism, 1919-1933 149
Nazism in Power, 1933-1945 151
Occupation (1945-1949), Division (1949-1990), and
Unification (1990-) 153
Interests in Contemporary Germany 153
Identities in Contemporary Germany 156
Institutions in Contemporary Germany 160
Germany's Post-World War II Developmental Path 171
BIBLIOGRAPHY 174
KEY PHASES IN GERMANY'S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 175
IMPORTANT TERMS 176
STUDY QUESTIONS 179
Six. Japan 181
Miranda A. Schreurs
Introduction 181
The Geography of Japan 182
xii CONTENTS
The Historical Roots of Institutions, Identities, and Interests 183
Tokugawa Japan, 1603-1867 183
The Meiji Era, 1868-1912 184
A Brief Interlude with Democracy: The Taisho Democracy,
1918-1932 186
Japan as a Military Power and a Colonial Force 186
Occupation of Japan 188
The Japanese Constitution and the Establishment of a
New Political Order 189
The "Reverse Course" and Japan's Emergence as a Key U.S. Ally 190
Understanding Japan's "Economic Miracle" 192
Opposition to the Conservative Agenda 195
The Politics of Reform 197
Economic Reform 197
Political Reform 199
Carving out a New International Role and Vision for Japan
in a Changing Global Order 202
Conclusion 205
BIBLIOGRAPHY 206
KEY PHASES IN lAPAN'S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 207
IMPORTANT TERMS 208
STUDY QUESTIONS 209
STOP AND COMPARE 211
Early Developers and Middle Developers 211
Middle Developers: Germany and Japan 211
PARTTHREE. LATE DEVELOPERS
Seven. Russia 219
Stephen E. Hanson
Introduction 219
The Rise and Fall of the USSR 220
From Marx to Lenin 220
From Lenin to Stalin 226
From Stalin to Gorbachev 234
Interests, Identities, and Institutions in Postcommunist Russia 241
The Leninist Legacy and Post-Soviet Interests 241
Yeltsin and the Design of Post-Soviet Institutions 244
The Putin Era 253
Institutions, Interests, and the Search for a New Russian Identity 260
KEY PHASES IN RUSSIA'S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 262
BIBLIOGRAPHY 263
IMPORTANT TERMS 264
STUDY QUESTIONS 267
CONTENTS xiii
Eight. China 271
Yu-ShanWu
Introduction 271
Historical Background 273
Developmental Stages of the Communist Regime 279
The Maoist Period: Totalitarianism 281
Deng Unleashes Reform 287
Jiang Zemin, Hu Jintao, and Neoconservatism 293
Will China Become Democratic? 299
BIBLIOGRAPHY 302
KEY PHASES IN CHINA'S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 303
IMPORTANT TERMS 304
STUDY QUESTIONS 310
STOP AND COMPARE 311
Early Developers, Middle Developers, and Late Developers 311
Late Developers: Russia and China 311
PART FOUR. EXPERIMENTAL DEVELOPERS
Nine. Mexico 319
Anthony Gill
Introduction 319
Historical, Social, and Ideological Origins 321
The Colonial Period 322
From Independence to Revolution 324
Independence and the Era of the Caudillos 324
The Ascendancy of Liberalism 327
The Porfiriato 329
Politics in the Twentieth Century: Revolution and Institutionalized
Rule 330
The Mexican Revolution 330
The Revolution Institutionalized 332
The Formal Institutional Structure of Mexican Politics 336
The Crisis of Corporatism during the Late Twentieth Century 337
Origins of the Crisis 338
Political Challenges in the 1980s and 1990s 340
The Political Consequences of Economic Crisis 341
Interests, Identities, and Institutions at the End ofthe Twentieth
Century 342
Competitive Democracy in Twenty-First-Century Mexico 349
Conclusion 355
KEY PHASES IN MEXICO'S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 357
BIBLIOGRAPHY 359
IMPORTANT TERMS 360
STUDY QUESTIONS 363
Xjv CONTENTS
Ten. India 367
Rudra Sil
Introduction 367
Pre-Independence India: Civilization and Empire to Colonialism
and Nationalism 369
Civilization and Empire: The Sources of Identity and Unity in
South Asia 369
The Encounter with the West: British Colonial Rule, 1757-1947 373
The Rise of Nationalism and the Movement for Independence 376
India's "Third Way": Political and Economic Development
in the Cold War Era 378
The Making of a Secular Nation: Political and Legal Institutions 379
The Making of Indian Federalism and Center-Periphery Relations 383
The Indira Gandhi Era: Populism, Patronage Politics, and the
"Emergency" 385
India's "Mixed" Strategy of Economic Development, 1950-1984 388
India Shining? Institutional Dynamics, Resilient Identities,
and Evolving Interests in the Post-Cold War Era 391
Stable Institutions and Coalition Politics in the World's Largest
Democracy 392
The Evolving Politics of Caste and Religion in Contemporary
India 397
Economic Liberalization in a Global Age: Achievements,
Problems, and Prospects 402
The Diversification of Social Forces: Labor, Women, and
Environmental Groups 407
Conclusion 409
BIBLIOGRAPHY 411
KEY PHASES IN INDIA'S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 414
IMPORTANT TERMS 414
STUDY QUESTIONS 417
Eleven. Iran 419
Vali Nasr
Introduction 419
The Global Context and the Rise of the Modern Iranian State 420
The Reza Shah Period and the Beginnings of Development, 1921-1941 421
The Democratic Interregnum, 1941-1954 426
Resurrection ofthe Pahlavi State, 1954-1963 428
Economic Growth and Authoritarianism, 1963-1979 429
The Revolutionary Era, 1979-1988 435
The Post-Khomeini Era, 1988-Present 441
The Presidential Elections of 1997 445
The Presidential Elections of 2005 449
Conclusion 453
BIBLIOGRAPHY 454
CONTENTS XV
KEY PHASES IN IRAN'S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 455
IMPORTANT TERMS 456
STUDY QUESTIONS 457
Twelve. South Africa 461
Michael Bratton
Introduction 461
The Global Historical Context 462
The Path of Development 464
The Apartheid Experiment 466
An Unexpected Transition 469
The Socioeconomic Structure 472
Contemporary Political Identities 474
Contemporary Political Interests 477
Democratic Political Institutions 480
Bureaucratic State Institutions 484
Conclusion: Consolidating Democracy? 488
BIBLIOGRAPHY 491
KEY PHASES IN SOUTH AFRICA'S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 492
IMPORTANT TERMS 493
STUDY QUESTIONS 494
Thirteen. The European Union 497
Paulette Kurzer
Introduction 497
The Origins of Regional Integration 498
Evolution of the European Union 500
The Institutions 505
The Commission 506
The Council 507
The European Court of Justice 510
The European Parliament 512
Interests 515
What Has Been Accomplished 518
The Common Agricultural Policy 518
The Single European Market 519
A Single Currency 521
Conclusion: Future Challenges 524
BIBLIOGRAPHY 527
KEY PHASES IN THE EUROPEAN UNION'S POLITICAL
DEVELOPMENT 528
IMPORTANT TERMS 529
STUDY QUESTIONS 532
Fourteen. Nigeria 535
Okechukwu Iheduru
Introduction 535
xvi CONTENTS
Social and Historical Origins 536
Conquest and Colonialism: The Sources of Identity and Unity in
Nigeria 536
Colonial Legacies: Emerging Interests, Identities, and Institutions 537
Nationalism and the Anticolonial Movement 539
From Independence to the Fall of the First Republic 541
Federalism and the Quest for Unity in Diversity 541
Ethnicity, Patronage Politics, and Party Politics 542
Military Intervention and the Biafran War of Secession 546
The Rise of "Military Federalism" and the Oil Boom Era 548
Military Rule, Prebendalism, and the "Curse of Black Gold"
(1970-1979) 548
Mixed Economy and State-Mediated Capital Accumulation 551
The Second Republic (1979-1983) 553
The Return of Military Dictatorships and "Transition without
End"(1983-1998) 555
The Return to Democracy and the Fourth Republic 561
Institutions and Elite Coalition Politics 561
The Politics of "Resource Control" 564
Population Count, Ethnic Mobilization, and Insurgency
Movements 564
Federalism, Federal Character, and the Politics of Zoning 566
Economic Reforms and the Politics of Development and
Deindustrialization 567
Corruption: Fighting the Canker Worm in the Social Fabric 569
Poverty, Unemployment, and General Insecurity 571
From the "Third-Term" Plot Debacle to a Strengthened Presidency 572
The 2007 Elections and Nigerian Politics in the Twenty-First Century 574
Interests, Institutions, and the 2007 Flawed Elections 574
The Judiciary: Compromised and Resilient 576
What Future for an Epileptic Giant? 579
KEY PHASES IN NIGERIA'S POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT 581
BIBLIOGRAPHY 583
IMPORTANT TERMS 584
STUDY QUESTIONS 587
STOP AND COMPARE 589
Early Developers, Middle Developers, Late Developers, and
Experimental Developers 589
Experimental Developers: Mexico, India, Iran, South Africa,
the European Union, and Nigeria 590
Index 593 |
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genre | (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content |
genre_facet | Aufsatzsammlung |
id | DE-604.BV023030716 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T19:16:52Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:09:23Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780521708401 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016234606 |
oclc_num | 173683808 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-20 |
owner_facet | DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-20 |
physical | XXI, 624 S. Kt. |
publishDate | 2009 |
publishDateSearch | 2009 |
publishDateSort | 2009 |
publisher | Cambridge Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Comparative politics interests, identities, and institutions in a changing global order ed. by Jeffrey Kopstein ... 3. ed. New York Cambridge Univ. Press 2009 XXI, 624 S. Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Institutions politiques comparées Comparative government Vergleichende politische Wissenschaft (DE-588)4137685-7 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content Vergleichende politische Wissenschaft (DE-588)4137685-7 s DE-604 Kopstein, Jeffrey Sonstige (DE-588)128627727 oth HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016234606&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Comparative politics interests, identities, and institutions in a changing global order Institutions politiques comparées Comparative government Vergleichende politische Wissenschaft (DE-588)4137685-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4137685-7 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Comparative politics interests, identities, and institutions in a changing global order |
title_auth | Comparative politics interests, identities, and institutions in a changing global order |
title_exact_search | Comparative politics interests, identities, and institutions in a changing global order |
title_exact_search_txtP | Comparative politics interests, identities, and institutions in a changing global order |
title_full | Comparative politics interests, identities, and institutions in a changing global order ed. by Jeffrey Kopstein ... |
title_fullStr | Comparative politics interests, identities, and institutions in a changing global order ed. by Jeffrey Kopstein ... |
title_full_unstemmed | Comparative politics interests, identities, and institutions in a changing global order ed. by Jeffrey Kopstein ... |
title_short | Comparative politics |
title_sort | comparative politics interests identities and institutions in a changing global order |
title_sub | interests, identities, and institutions in a changing global order |
topic | Institutions politiques comparées Comparative government Vergleichende politische Wissenschaft (DE-588)4137685-7 gnd |
topic_facet | Institutions politiques comparées Comparative government Vergleichende politische Wissenschaft Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016234606&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT kopsteinjeffrey comparativepoliticsinterestsidentitiesandinstitutionsinachangingglobalorder |