100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

Instructor’s Resource Manual and Test Bank for Comparative Politics, Updated Edition, 2nd Edition by David J Samuels, Chapter 1-13

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
363
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
02-04-2025
Written in
2024/2025

Instructor’s Resource Manual and Test Bank for Comparative Politics, Updated Edition, 2nd Edition by David J Samuels, Chapter 1-13

Institution
Comparative Politics, Updated Edition, 2e
Course
Comparative Politics, Updated Edition, 2e











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Comparative Politics, Updated Edition, 2e
Course
Comparative Politics, Updated Edition, 2e

Document information

Uploaded on
April 2, 2025
Number of pages
363
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Content preview

kjhgds
M

Instructor’s Resource Manual
PR
and Test Bank

for
ES
Comparative Politics
Second Edition
SI
David J. Samuels,
VE
G
All Chapters Included
R
All Answers Included
AD
ES

jhgfds

, kjhgds
CONTENTS
M
Chapter 1. Doing Comparative Politics 1

Chapter 2. The State 26
PR
Chapter 3. Democratic Political Regimes 52

Chapter 4. Non-Democratic Political Regimes 85

Chapter 5. Regime Change 115
ES
Chapter 6. Political Identity 143

Chapter 7. Religion and Politics 169
.
Chapter 8. Gender and Politics 197
SI
Chapter 9. Collective Action 220
.
Chapter 10. Political Violence 248
VE
Chapter 11. Political Economy of Development 275

Chapter 12. The Political Economy of Redistribution 304

Chapter 13. Globalization 333
G
R
AD
ES

jhgfds

, kjhgds


Chapter 1: Doing Comparative Politics

Learning Objectives
M
• 1.1 What is comparative politics all about?
• 1.2 What sorts of questions do we ask in comparative politics?
PR
• 1.3 How do we build arguments in comparative politics?
• 1.4 What challenges confront building arguments in comparative politics?
• 1.5 How do we obtain evidence to build arguments in comparative politics?

Chapter Summary
ES
This chapter opens by asking, “Why study comparative politics?” We study comparative
politics in order to explain different political and economic outcomes in different countries. We
study comparative politics in order to better understand our own country. This textbook takes a
question-and -answer organizational approach in order to help the student recognize different
explanations for the same event and to aid students in their comparative thinking. This book is
SI
designed to give students the tools they will need to critically engage key questions and build
their own arguments about politics.

Studying Comparative Politics
VE
Politics is about the making of authoritative public choices from private preferences.
Political science examines these public choices and seeks to understand how those choices
were arrived at and what consequences arose from those choices. Comparative politics is the
systematic search for answers to political questions about how people around the world make
and contest authoritative public choices. Comparative politics looks at why countries made
different decisions under similar political rules or similar decisions under different political
G
rules. Comparativists use countries as cases in order compare and contrast them.
Comparativists engage in this research in order to understand how politics works around the
world. They assemble evidence which supports their arguments rather than relying on
“conventional wisdom” which occasionally falls down in the face of the facts. While
R
conventional wisdom may be accurate at time, comparativists use the comparative method to
buttress their claims. The comparing and contrasting of cases is used to generate hypotheses
about politics around the world.
AD
The Foundations of Comparative Politics
Many of the questions comparativists ask today are quite ancient. The Greek
philosopher Aristotle attempted to compare and contrast all of the constitutions of his day in
order to determine which best balanced good government with political stability.
Comparativists of today still ask the same question. Prior to the Enlightenment, most study of
ES
government was from a religious and moral perspective. After the Renaissance and the
Enlightenment, the study of government moved to a more secular position and philosophers
like Jean-Jacques Rousseau and John Locke began to theorize about secular-rational

kjhgfds

, kjhgds


justifications for different types of government. Their writings laid the framework for the U.S.
Declaration of Independence and the French Revolution. Questions of the relationship of
government to human liberty and the proper way to limit government power dominated their
M
writings and will be addressed later in this textbook. In the nineteenth century, the rise of
Industrial Revolution prompted new questions about government from thinkers such as Karl
Marx and Max Weber. These writers focused on the relationship of politics to economics and
PR
many of their questions are dealt with in this textbook. In the early twentieth century questions
began to be raised about the future of democracy, especially with the rise of totalitarian
systems in the Soviet Union, Nazi Germany, and Fascist Italy. The distinction between various
ideologies and non-democratic regime types are addressed in this textbook as well.
Decolonization in the 1960s and 1970s raised new questions about the legacy of colonialism
and how these new countries can best organize their political and economic systems. In the late
ES
1980s and early 1990s, a number of formerly non -democratic states transitioned to
democratization, leading to new questions about regime change and the adaptability of various
cultures to democratic norms. The twenty-first century has led to new questions about gender
relations and the impact of globalization on international economics, politics, and culture. The
role of religion in government as well as the ongoing ethnic violence in many countries has
raised profound questions for comparativists. These questions, and others, are addressed in the
SI
following chapters.

The Comparative Method
The questions we ask in comparative politics are always inspired by real-world events
VE
and there are often no easy answers. The worst sorts of arguments in comparative politics are
based on opinions rooted in stereotypes, in the belief that the past predicts the future, or on
generalizations drawn from specific facts.
In order to overcome a purely opinion-based comparative politics, comparativists look
to study questions about political events that might seem inevitable or those that might
seem to have an “obvious” explanation. Comparativists explore a wide range of possible
G
cases that have similar characteristics but that experience different outcomes, or vice versa,
in order to answer questions about politics around the world.
Comparativists are wary of building arguments based exclusively on the particulars of a
R
single case. A good comparativist would ask, “Is the emergence of democracy in South Korea
just one example of a pattern?” and would explore not just whether democracy has emerged in
other similar places at the same time, but also whether it has emerged in different places at the
same time. Comparativists do this in order to build and support a hypothesis that is an
AD
argument that links cause to effect. Reliable hypotheses have been tested across more than
one case. Therefore, those who study comparative politics search for patterns of attributes and
outcomes – their presence or absence – across cases. While comparativists cannot always
gather information from all cases, their research always involves more than one country.
Hypotheses have two important characteristics: they are causal and they are testable.
First, implicitly or explicitly, hypotheses posit causal relationships between attributes and
ES
outcomes. Hypotheses must also be testable. It is not enough to simply seek out and find
evidence that supports a hypothesized connection between cause and effect – comparativists
must also account for cases that do not fit their expectations. These cases are used to refine

kjhgfds

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
Impressivegrades Chamberlain College Of Nursing
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
667
Member since
2 year
Number of followers
496
Documents
1134
Last sold
3 hours ago
ACHIEVERS HUB

Struggling with assignments or facing tough exams? As an online tutor specializing in psychology, nursing, and mathematics, I offer comprehensive study resources such as study notes and exam reviews. These resources are designed to ensure excellent grades in both exams and assignments. Stay with me, download the materials, and ace those exams with confidence!

4.0

66 reviews

5
39
4
11
3
5
2
2
1
9

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions