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The future of politicial science : 100 perspectives (Record no. 28709)

MARC details
000 -LEADER
fixed length control field 07580nam a2200217Ia 4500
003 - CONTROL NUMBER IDENTIFIER
control field OSt
005 - DATE AND TIME OF LATEST TRANSACTION
control field 20201214113021.0
008 - FIXED-LENGTH DATA ELEMENTS--GENERAL INFORMATION
fixed length control field 160316s2009 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 ## - INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER
International Standard Book Number ISBN 9780415997010
040 ## - CATALOGING SOURCE
Transcribing agency NLS
082 ## - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER
Classification number 320
Item number KIN
100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name King Gary
245 ## - TITLE STATEMENT
Title The future of politicial science : 100 perspectives
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC.
Place of publication, distribution, etc. London
Name of publisher, distributor, etc. Routledge
Date of publication, distribution, etc. 2009
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Extent 283p
Dimensions xiii
365 ## - TRADE PRICE
Price amount Rs. 1,565
505 ## - FORMATTED CONTENTS NOTE
Formatted contents note 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/>
650 ## - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name entry element 1. Political Science
700 ## - ADDED ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Scholzman Kay Lehman
-- Nie Norman H
942 ## - ADDED ENTRY ELEMENTS (KOHA)
Source of classification or shelving scheme Dewey Decimal Classification
Koha item type BOOKs
Holdings
Withdrawn status Lost status Damaged status Not for loan Home library Current library Shelving location Date acquired Cost, normal purchase price Total Checkouts Full call number Barcode Date last seen Price effective from Koha item type
        . . Library Compactors 30.05.2017 1565.00   320 KIN 26130 30.05.2017 30.05.2017 BOOKs