ABSTRACT

Harold D. Lasswell is arguably the quintessential face of political science to the larger public of the past century. However, there is a side to Lasswell less well known, but of special importance in this day and age: the place of the profession of politics as an academic activity. This book, written at the start of the culture wars thirty years ago, outlines the basic core position of political science practitioners. It helps to explain why the field kept its collective cool, when other social science professionals veered to more extreme activist positions.The Future of Political Science grew out of the phenomenally rapid expansion of the study of government in the United States and elsewhere. The study of professionalism among physical scientists, lawyers, engineers, etc. was not matched by such internal examination within the social sciences until much later. Lasswell's overview centered on developments in the United States. There unfettered study of government reached unprecedented heights in the final stage of the twentieth century. The key concept of this volume, one that continues to inform discourse, is the relationship of political science as a mechanism for the study and teaching of the political system to the field as a tool of the Establishment. This concern grew in the wake of a variety of scandals and secret support sponsored by both government and non-government organizations alike.The Future of Political Science covers areas ranging from membership size and disparities, intervention scenarios in world events, the nature of creativity in political research collaboration in projects with the other social sciences, and the location of scientific centers of gravity in the study of politics. Because of Lasswell's works we have a field of the political science of knowledge as well as the sociology of knowledge.Harold D. Lasswell served as Ford Foundation Professor of the Social Sciences at Yale University, Distinguished Professor of Policy Sciences at Joh

chapter 1|29 pages

Political Science Today

chapter 2|13 pages

Growth and Ambiguity

chapter 3|26 pages

The Basic Data Survey (I)

chapter 4|6 pages

Appendix to Chapter 4

chapter 5|28 pages

Experimentation, Prototyping, Intervention

chapter 6|24 pages

Micromodeling

chapter 7|20 pages

Cultivation of Creativity (I)

chapter 8|22 pages

Cultivation of Creativity (II)

chapter 9|19 pages

Collaboration with Allied Professions

chapter 10|31 pages

Centers for Advanced Political Science

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion