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Table of Contents;<br/>Introduction; <br/>1. The United States: A Different Democracy, Arend Lijphart; <br/>2. Taking Portraits or Group Photos?, Russell Dalton;<br/>3. Why Political Theorists Should Think More Carefully About Leadership, Nannerl O. Keohane ;<br/>4. The Leadership Gap, Mark A. Peterson;<br/>5. Instrumental Value of Elite Memories on Past Violence during the mergence of a New State: Slovenian Experience, Anton Kramberger, Ana Barbic and Katja Boh; <br/>6. Politicians are People, too, Philip Edward Jones;<br/>7. Elite Tough Talk and the Tides of History, Henry E. Brady;<br/>8. Representation as a Field of Study, Barry C. Burden;<br/>9. Political Science: What Should We Know?, David Butler;<br/>10. Dynamic Categories and the Context of Power, Jane Junn;<br/>11. Politics as Learning, Hugh Heclo;<br/>12. Rounding Up the Activists, Kent Jennings;<br/>13. The Troubling Persistence of Injustice, Michael L. Frazer;<br/>14. Making a Name for Oneself, Harvey Mansfield;<br/>15. Political Variation across Contexts, Michael Jones-Correa;<br/>16. Homo Politicus is Not an Island, Claudine Gay;<br/>17. The Sociological Bases of Political Preferences and Behavior, Casey A. Klofstad;<br/>18. Community Social Capital, Kristi Andersen ;<br/>19. Tuned In, But Dropped Out, Carole Jean Uhlaner;<br/>20. Cognition, Emotion and Selectivity in Political Communication in a Multi-Facetted World, Rational Choice and Political Culture, Robert H. Bates;<br/>21. Who Wants War?, Ann Sartori ;<br/>22. The Threat to Democracy, Lawrence R. Jacobs;<br/>23. Nationalist Missions and the Democratic Citizen, Katherine Tate;<br/>24. Something's Going On Here, but We Don't Know What It Is: <br/>Measuring Citizens' Exposure to Politically-Relevant Information in the New Media Environment, Michael X. Delli Carpini;<br/>25. What We Still Need to Know Why and How People Become Committed Democrats, Philip Oxhorn;<br/>26. When We Could Do So Much Better: Democratic Commitment and Empirical Political Psychology, by Virginia Sapiro;<br/>27. Political Science and the Future, James Q. Wilson;<br/>28. Family Matters, David E. Campbell;<br/>29. Where do the Premises of Political Choice Come From?, Daniel Carpenter 30. Immigration, Partisanship and Electoral Change, Norman H. Nie;<br/>31. Decisions People Make in Small Groups, John Aldrich;<br/>32. Why Do (Some) People Acquire Costly Political Knowledge?, Torben Iversen;<br/>33. A Political View of Political Ideology, John Zaller;<br/>34. Guess What? Voters are Smart, Gerald Pomper ;<br/>35. Extra! Extra! Extra Info Needed with Survey Reporting, Andrea Louise Campbell ;<br/>36. What Should Journalists and Politicians Know? Beyond the Margin of Error, Morris P. Fiorina ;<br/>37. The Need for Survey Reporting Standards in Political Science, D. Sunshine Hillygus;<br/>38. The Changing Evidence Base of Political Science Research, Gary King ;<br/>39. FMRI and Public Opinion Research, Ikua Kabashima ;<br/>40. Special Interest Politics, Jeffry A. Frieden ;<br/>41. An Ever Fainter Voice, Jeffrey M. Berry ;<br/>42. Exploring Political Inequality, Benjamin I. Page ;<br/>43. Voice, and Then What?, Larry M. Bartels;<br/>44. The Impact of Unequal Political Participation on Policy Outcome, Eric Schickler;<br/>45. Participation Matters, Jan Leighley;<br/>46. Participatory Distortion ($$) Takes Off!!, Philip Converse;<br/>47. The Rashomon World of Money and Politics, Thomas E. Mann;<br/>48. Does Rising Economic Inequality Matter, Christopher Jencks;<br/>49. Redistribution without Representation and Representation without Redistribution, James E. Alt;<br/>50. The Ideological Origins of Redistribution, Eric Nelson;<br/>51. Reuniting Interests and Values, David C. Leege;<br/>52. Using Research to Foster Democracy, Ken Stehlik-Berry;<br/>53. "Moral Convictions, Religion, and Diversity: Our Political Atmosphere, William C. McCready;<br/>54. Equality and Inclusiveness, Diversity and Conflict, John R. Petrocik;<br/>55. The End of 'the Protestant Nation', Byron Shafer;<br/>56. The Political Force of Group Consciousness, Bill Schneider;<br/>57. Going Global: New challenges and opportunities in research on democratic participation and the civic culture, Pippa Norris;<br/>58. The Effects of Immigration and Sending Countries Outreach on American Public Opinion and Political Behavior, Rodolfo O. de La Garza;<br/>59. Exorcising Huntingtonian Specters, Ary Zolberg;<br/>60. Adding-in Sex Discrimination to Legacies of Wrongdoing, Eileen McDonaugh;<br/>61. Gender Inequality, Nancy Burns;<br/>62. Gender Differences as the Basis for a Refoundation of the Social Sciences: The Political Integration of Women: Explaining Women’s Slow Advancement into Political Office, Michelle Swers;<br/>63. Is American Becoming a More Class-Based Society?, Robert Putnam;<br/>64. The NAACP Nobody Knows, Richard Vallelly;<br/>65. At the Intersection of Inequalities, Shauna L. Shames;<br/>66. The Professional Campaign, Ganesh Sitamaran;<br/>67. What Politicians Actually Can do: A Modest Proposal for Reporting on Campaigns, Daniel Schlozman;<br/>68. Elections: Five Rules for Commentators, John Mark Hansen;<br/>69. Negative Ads, Cynical Public?, Arthur Sanders;<br/>70. Independent Electoral Commissions, Nahomi Ichino;<br/>71. Watch Out! The Units You are Comparing May Not be What They Used to be!, Philippe C. Schmitter;<br/>72. Don't Stay Home: The Utility of Area Studies for Political Science Scholarship, by Jorge I. Dominguez;<br/>73. Can We Really be Happy with the Study of Comparative Government?, Hans Daalder;<br/>74. The Contingent Flaw of Majoritarian Systems, G. Bingham Powell, Jr.;<br/>75. Religion and Politics, Goldie Shabad;<br/>76. Study China!, Roderick MacFarquhar;<br/>77. Soft Power and the Future of Asia, by Lucian Pye;<br/>78. The Study of International Law, by Jens Meierhenrich;<br/>79. The Second Image Reversed Revisited, Robert Keohane;<br/>80. The Globalization Gap, James Rosenau;<br/>81. Congress and the Scope of Democracy, Ira Katznelson;<br/>82. 'Free Association': Traveling Ideas and the Study of Political Equality, Nancy Rosenblum;<br/>83. To Participate or Deliberate —is that the Question?, Dennis F. Thompson;<br/>84. Understanding Democracy as a Complex Adaptive System, Louise K.Comfort;<br/>85. The Public Roots of Private Action: A New Look at Voting Costs, Susan B. Hansen;<br/>86. On the Free Rider Problem, Jane Mansbridge;<br/>87. Time and Action in the 21st Century, Anya Bernstein;<br/>88. The Organizational 'Gap' in Political Science, Joseph LaPalombara;<br/>89. The Sudden Birth of Sticky Institutions, 1890-1915, Gerald Gamm;<br/>90. The Emerging Field of Education Policy, Paul Peterson;<br/>91. American Politics and the Not-So-Benign Neglect of Criminal Justice, Traci Burch;<br/>92. Law or Politics?, H. W. Perry, Jr.;<br/>93. What is Public Policy?, Catherine E. Rudder;<br/>94. Note to Politicians: Forget the Silver Bullet!, Kay Lehman Schlozman;<br/>95. Rediscovering Complexity and Synthesis, Bear F. Braumoeller;<br/>96. Why?, Kenneth A. Shepsle;<br/>97. Path Dependence, Peter A. Hall;<br/>98. Searching for a Politics of Space, Jennifer Hochschild;<br/>99. The Question of Relevance, Joseph S. Nye, Jr.;<br/>100. Can (Should) Political Science be a Policy Science?, Kenneth Prewitt;<br/>Biography;<br/>Reviews;<br/> |