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A history of political science Mark Bevir.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Cambridge elements. Elements in historical theory and practicePublication details: United Kingdom Cambridge 2022Description: 72ISBN:
  • 9781009044295
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 320.09 23/eng/20220824 BEV.C
Contents:
Introduction -- The rise of political science -- Modernist moments -- Thinking globally -- Neoliberalism and after -- The revenge of history.
Summary: "This Element denaturalizes political science, stressing the contestability and contingency of ideas, traditions, subfields, and even the discipline itself. The history of political science is less one of scholars testing and improving theories by reference to data than of their appropriating and transforming ideas, often obscuring or obliterating former meanings, to serve new purposes in shifting political contexts. Political science arose in the late nineteenth century as part of a wider modernism that replaced earlier developmental narratives with more formal explanations. It changed as some scholars yoked together behavioural topics, quantitative techniques, and positivist theory, and as other scholars rejected their doing so. Subfields such as international relations remained semi-detached and focussed on policy as much as theory. Furthermore, the shifting fashions within political science - modernism, behaviouralism, realism, neoliberalism, the new institutionalism - have informed the policies by which governments have tried to tame contingency and govern people"--
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Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book Campus Library Kariavattom Campus Library Kariavattom 320.09 BEV.C (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available UCL33736

Includes bibliographical references.

Introduction -- The rise of political science -- Modernist moments -- Thinking globally -- Neoliberalism and after -- The revenge of history.

"This Element denaturalizes political science, stressing the contestability and contingency of ideas, traditions, subfields, and even the discipline itself. The history of political science is less one of scholars testing and improving theories by reference to data than of their appropriating and transforming ideas, often obscuring or obliterating former meanings, to serve new purposes in shifting political contexts. Political science arose in the late nineteenth century as part of a wider modernism that replaced earlier developmental narratives with more formal explanations. It changed as some scholars yoked together behavioural topics, quantitative techniques, and positivist theory, and as other scholars rejected their doing so. Subfields such as international relations remained semi-detached and focussed on policy as much as theory. Furthermore, the shifting fashions within political science - modernism, behaviouralism, realism, neoliberalism, the new institutionalism - have informed the policies by which governments have tried to tame contingency and govern people"--

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