Introduction to Comparative PoliticsWritten by a distinguished group of comparativists, this innovative and accessible introductory text surveys 12 key countries organized according to their level of political development: established democracies, transitional democracies, and non-democracies. The country studies illuminate four comparative themes in a global context: the world of states, examining the interaction of states within the international order; governing the economy, covering the role of the state in economic management; the democratic idea, discussing the pressure for more democracy and the challenges of democratization; and the politics of collective identities, studying the political impact of diverse attachments and sources of group identity.
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These too are often called keiretsu , but they are characterized more by vertical
ties that link several large firms to ... thirty formally independent , coequal
corporations whose presidents form an informal executive committee called the
Friday ...
Brazil ' s farmlands are particularly fertile , including large soy - producing areas
in the central savannas called the cerrados , cof - fee areas of the Paraíba Valley
near Rio de Janeiro and in São Paulo , and sugar and other agriculture along ...
Whenever the military is called in to resolve domestic conflicts , some Mexicans
become concerned that the institution is becoming politicized and may come to
play a larger role in political decision making From time to time , rumors of ...
ما يقوله الناس - كتابة مراجعة
المحتوى
Established Democracies | 24 |
Implications for Comparative Politics | 38 |
Society and Economy | 44 |
حقوق النشر | |
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