ABSTRACT

Ilchman and Uphoff believe that political science has failed in the past to meet its own standards of rigor and cogency and does not meet standards of usefulness and relevance set by others. The Political Economy of Change attempts to remedy these shortcomings by expanding the limits of social science analysis to deal with problems of allocation and productivity in all spheres of public choice, not just the economic sphere.

chapter |2 pages

The Political Economy of Change

chapter I|23 pages

Why Political Economy?

chapter II|23 pages

The New Political Economy

chapter III|43 pages

Political Resources

chapter IV|44 pages

Political Exchange

chapter V|24 pages

Political Inflation and Deflation

chapter VI|20 pages

Political Resource Management

chapter VII|28 pages

Political Resource Accumulation

chapter VIII|50 pages

Political and Administrative Infrastructure

chapter IX|31 pages

The Application of Political Economy