Masters of Political Science

Front Cover
Donatella Campus, Gianfranco Pasquino
ECPR Press, Sep 1, 2009 - Literary Criticism - 260 pages

For a while now, political science as a discipline has been big enough (in terms of the number of academics) and analytically mature enough to justify reflections on and reviews of its achievements. In fact, there is no lack of general handbooks, dictionaries and 'state of the art' assessments (as well as 'reflective' journals such as the ECPR's own European Political Science), which are useful in helping us to understand and evaluate where we currently are and where we might still need to go. The focus of these texts, however, is on particular concepts, themes, research areas, institutions or behaviour. What they rarely do is indulge in a critical reflection on the political scientists themselves, especially those who are commonly accepted as having made the most significant contributions to the growth of their discipline. This book fills an important gap in the growing reflective literature on the political science discipline: it consists of a series of 'objective' profiles of the 'Masters of Political Science', written by political scientists who have read and studied their work and who are therefore in a position to evaluate the nature of their contributions. 


The Masters:
Robert Dahl, Anthony Downs, David Easton, S. E. Finer, Samuel P. Huntington, Juan J. Linz, Seymour Martin Lipset, Giovanni Sartori, Sidney Verba, Aaron Wildavsky, Hans Morgenthau
 

Contents

Introduction
1
The Democratic Polyarchy
11
Master of Many Models
37
The Theory of the Political System
63
S E Finer The Erudite Individualist
85
Political Order and
99
An Intellectual and Personal Biography of
121
Modernisation Social Structure
141
Democracy Parties Institutions
167
His Voice
179
Civic Passion and Scientific Commitment
205
Political Theory and Practical Philosophy
223
Index
239
Copyright

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About the author (2009)

Donatella Campus is associate professor of political science at the University of Bologna. She is the author of L'elettore pigro and L'antipolitica al governo as well as numerous articles on political communication and electoral politics. 

Gianfranco Pasquino is professor of political science at the University of Bologna. He has also taught at Johns Hopkins University's Bologna Center for more than thirty years. Recently he has coedited the third edition of the Dizionario di Politica, edited Strumenti della democrazia, and written Le istituzioni di Arlecchino.

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