ABSTRACT

This book contains some of the newest, most exciting ideas now percolating among political scientists, from hallway conversations to conference room discussions. To spur future research, enrich classroom teaching, and direct non-specialist attention to cutting-edge ideas, a distinguished group of authors from various parts of this sprawling and pluralistic discipline has each contributed a brief essay about a single novel or insufficiently appreciated idea on some aspect of political science. The one hundred essays are concise, no more than a few pages apiece, and informal. While the contributions are highly diverse, readers can find unexpected connections across the volume, tracing echoes as well as diametrically opposed points of view. This book offers compelling points of departure for everyone who is concerned about political science -- whether as a scholar, teacher, student, or interested reader.

chapter 4|3 pages

“The Leadership Gap” Mark A. Peterson

chapter 11|1 pages

“Politics as Learning” Hugh Heclo

chapter 21|2 pages

“Who Wants War?” Anne Sartori

chapter 28|3 pages

“Family Matters” David E. Campbell

chapter 45|2 pages

“Participation Matters” Jan Leighley

chapter 59|2 pages

EXORCISING HUNTINGTONIAN SPECTERS

chapter 61|3 pages

“Gender Inequality” Nancy Burns

chapter 64|3 pages

“The NAACP Nobody Knows” Rick Valelly

chapter 75|3 pages

“Religion and Politics” Goldie Shabad

chapter 76|1 pages

“Study China!” Roderick MacFarquhar

chapter 92|3 pages

“Law or Politics?” H.W. Perry, Jr

chapter 96|2 pages

“Why?” Kenneth A. Shepsle

chapter 97|3 pages

“Path Dependence” Peter A. Hall