ࡱ> `b_ *0bjbj ;bee(($$8@<"$2"@@@#######,T&)##@@#@@"#rTU P  "#0"$# 2))U U > @##"$)$ :   COMPARATIVE POLITICS FIELD SEMINAR PSC 350/550 Spring 2014 Wednesday 14:00-16:40 (Harkness 329) Professors Gretchen Helmke ( HYPERLINK "mailto:hlmk@rochester.edu" hlmk@rochester.edu) and Bing Powell (gb.powell@rochester.edu) OVERVIEW PSC 350/550 is the required field seminar for the comparative politics field of the Ph.D. program. Comparative politics seeks to develop and test theories that can be used to explain political events and patterns across political systems, largely, but not exclusively, nation-states. In American political science this has largely come to mean description and explanation of politics in countries outside the United States. This course is designed to introduce students to classic and contemporary works across a range of subfields of comparative politics, including: democracy, dictatorship, and development, revolutions and violence, culture and social movements, parties and electoral systems, representation and accountability, institutions of governance, and political economy. It will also introduce various methodological approaches and issues in the comparative field, including research design and case selection. Undergraduates will be permitted to enroll only with consent of the instructors. REQUIREMENTS This class is a discussion seminar, not a lecture course. It is essential that students be prepared to discuss ALL of the readings each and every class. Many of the works that we will read are a blend of theory, methods, and substantive empirical analysis, which are aimed at uncovering systematic patterns or solving puzzles. Class participants should thus be prepared to describe and compare the weeks required readings from two points of view: What are the principal substantive arguments being made? What phenomena are the targets of explanation? Are they clearly identified and defined? Are they defined at the level of individuals, groups, institutions, states, or other sorts of entities? What variables are proposed to explain them? At what level are these variables? What causal mechanisms are proposed as linkages? What methodological approach is taken to enhance the credibility of those arguments and how well does it succeed? What kinds of empirical implications of the theory are examined? For example, over-time changes or corresponding cross-national levels of variables at a single point in time? Evidence of behavioral connections? How are the important variables measured--quantitative/qualitative approaches? What care is taken to specify relationships between multiple variables? How are cases selected? Student responsibilities include leading discussion of one of the readings in each seminar, drawing the class into describing and comparing the readings substantively and methodologically. (There will be some flexibility about this depending on the size of the class and the readings for the week.) A one-two page handout of notes should be provided. Grades will be based on these presentations and general class discussion (33%); the take-home midterm, (33%); and a take-home final (33%), covering the 2nd half of the course. REQUIRED READINGS You may want to purchase the books marked with a *; if you do not already have them. They are all paperbacks. As many of these are somewhat older works, you may well be able to get them less expensively through half.com or Amazon or other internet sites. (We did not order them through the bookstore.) Most articles are available through the Voyager electronic journals. Other works will be available on-line through course reserves or in a box in the Political Science Lounge, Harkness 314. Please be sure to return these quickly, so that others can read them WEEKLY SCHEDULE January 15. Organizational Meeting. Syllabus. January 22 Democracy, Dictatorship and Development I Dahl, Robert. Polyarchy, 1971, 1-16, 33-47. Lipset, Seymour Martin. APSR, March, 1959 or Political Man, Doubleday 1960, Ch.2. Moore, Barrington. Social Origins of Dictatorship & Dem. Beacon 1968, Ch. 1, 7, 9. Huntington, Samuel. Political Order in Changing Societies. Yale 1968, 1-92, 192-237. January 29 Development, Dictatorship and Democratization II Acemoglu & Robinson, Economic Origins Dictatorship & Democracy 2006, Ch. 1-3. *Przeworski, Adam, et al. Development and Democracy, Cambridge 2000, Ch. 1- 2. Ross, Michael. Does Oil Hinder Democracy? World Politics 2001 53:325-366. Haber, Stephen and Victor Menaldo. Do Natural Resources Fuel Authoritarianism? APSR Feb 2011, 105:1-26. February 5 Case Selection and Comparative Politics Geddes, Barbara. How the Cases You Choose Affect the Answers You Get: Selection Bias in Comparative Politics," Political Analysis 2 (1990), 131-50. Gerring, John, The Case Study, in Carles Boix and Susan C. Stokes, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Politics (Oxford University Press, 2008), pp. 90-122. Lieberman, Evan, Nested Analysis as a Mixed-Method Strategy for Comparative Research, APSR (August 2005) 99 (3): 435-452. Elizabeth Woods, Field Research, in Boix and Stokes,eds., Oxford Handbook of Comparative Politics (Oxford University Press, 2008), pp. 123-146. Humphreys and Weinstein, Field Experiments and the Political Economy of Development, Annual Review of Political Science, 2009.) February 12 The State, Conflict, and Order *Bates, Robert. When Things Fell Apart. 2008. Reuschmeyer, Dietrich, et al. Capitalist Development & Democracy, Chicago 1992, 75-99. Skocpol, Theda. States and Social Revolutions. 1979, at least 3-42, 161-171. Tilly, Charles, War Making and State Making as Organized Crime in Peter Evans, Dietrich Rueschemeyer, and Theda Skocpol, Bringing the State Back In (Cambridge University Press, 1985), pp. 169-191. February 19 Political Economy of Developing Societies Przeworski, et al. Democracy and Development, 2000, Ch. 3-5. Acemoglu, Daron and James Robinson. "The Comparative Origins of Comparative Development: An Empirical Investigation American Economic Review (2001) 91 (5), 1369 1401. North, Douglass C., 1990, Institutions, Institutional Change, and Economic Performance. New York: Cambridge University Press. Read Chapters 1, 4, 7-14; Skim Chapters 2, 3, 5, 6 February 26 MIDTERM A take-home midterm will be arranged for this week. March 5 Parties, Elections and Election Rules Downs, Anthony. Economic Theory of Democracy, 1957, Ch. 7-8. Boix, Carles. Setting the Rules APSR, Sept 1999 *Cox, Gary. Making Votes Count, Cambridge 1997, Ch. 1-4, 7-8, 10,11, 12. Htun, Mala et al. Between Science and Engineering: Electoral Rules and Democratic Governance, Perspectives on Politics, 11 (Sept. 2013), 808-840. March 12 SPRING BREAK - NO CLASS March 19 Voters, Citizens and Clients *Duch, Raymond and Randolph Stevenson, The Economic Vote. 2008, Ch. 1, 3, 9 (7). Magaloni, Beatriz. The Game of Electoral Fraud and the Ousting of Authoritarian Rule. AJPS 54(3):751-765. Stokes, Susan. Perverse Accountability: A Formal Model of Machine Politics with Evidence from Argentina. APSR 99(3):315-325, August, 2005. Wantchekon, L. Clientelism and Voting Behavior:evidence from a field experiment In Benin. World Politics 55: 399-422, 2003. (Recommended only: Stokes, Susan. Political Clientelism in Boix & Stokes, Oxford Handbook of Comparative Politics, Oxford 2007, 604-627.) March 26 Institutions Ostrom, Eleanor. Governing the Commons. Cambridge 1990. Ch. 1, 3 (skim ch. 2). North, Douglass C., and Barry R. Weingast, Constitutions and Commitment: The Evolution of Institutions Governing Public Choice in Seventeenth Century England, Journal of Economic History 49, No 4 (December 1989): 803-832. Greif, Avner, and David Laitin, A Theory of Endogenous Institutional Change, APSR 98, No. 4 (November 2004): 633-652. Tsebelis, George, Decision-Making in Political Systems: Veto Players in Presidentialism, Parliamentarism, Multicameralism, and Multipartism in BJPS 1997: 289-325 April 2 Political Economy of Developed World Iverson, Torben and David Soskice. Electoral Institutions and Politics of Coalitions. APSR 2006 165-182. 2004. * Przeworski, Adam. States and Markets 2003. (Skim ch. 2-4) Rogowski, Ronald. Commerce & Coalitions, 1989, Ch.1 (or 1987 APSR article) April 9 Representation and Accountability *Powell, Elections as Instruments of Democracy, Yale 2000, esp. Ch. 1-4, 7, 9-10. *Stokes, Mandates and Democracy, Cambridge 2001. *Riker, Liberalism Against Populism, 1982, Ch. 1,5, 8, 10. April 16 Violence and Ethnicity *Kalyvaas, Stathis. The Logic of Violence in Civil War. Cambridge 2006, Ch. Intro, 4,5,7, 9, 10, Conclusion. Fearon, James and David Laitin, D. Ethnicity, Insurgency and Civil War, APSR (97) Feb 2003, 75-90. Posner, Daniel. Political Salience of Cultural Difference, APSR, Nov. 2004. April 23 Culture and Social Movements * Laitin, David, Hegemony and Culture, Chicago, 1986, esp. 1,4,6-8, Appendix. *Putnam, Robert. Making Democracy Work: Civic Traditions in Modern Italy, Princeton, 1993. (Skip Ch. 2.) Tarrow, Sidney. Power in Movement, Cambridge 1994, Ch. 1,2,7,9 Acharya, Blackwell and Sen The Political Legacy of American Slavery U of 91̳, 2013 April 30 TAKE-HOME FINAL covering 2nd half of course. 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