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| Introduction |
Todd Landman and Neil Robinson |
| PART ONE: METHODS AND FIELDS OF COMPARATIVE POLITICS |
|
| The Distinctiveness of Comparative Research |
Charles C Ragin and Claude Rubinson |
| Global Comparative Methods |
Paul Pennings, Hans Keman and Jan Kleinnijenhuis |
| Case Studies |
Darren Hawkins |
| Is there a Quantitative-Qualitative Divide in Comparative Politics? The Case of Process Tracing |
James A Caporaso |
| Establishing Equivalence |
Jan W van Deth |
| Comparative Political Sociology |
Willfried Spohn |
| Comparative Institutional Analysis |
Vivien A Schmidt |
| Comparative Political Economy |
Thomas Pl mper |
| The Contribution of Area Studies |
Stephen E Hanson |
| Comparative Politics and International Relations |
John M Hobson |
| PART TWO: CLASSIC ISSUES IN COMPARATIVE POLITICS |
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| Postindustrial Democracies: Political economy and democratic partisan competition |
Herbert Kitschelt |
| Government Formation |
Wolfgang C M ller |
| Institutional Design |
Josep M Colomer |
| Comparative Political Behaviour: What is being compared? |
Shaun Bowler |
| Changes in the Causes of Democratization through Time |
Barbara Geddes |
| Political Culture |
Christian Welzel |
| Revolution |
Jack A Goldstone |
| Social Movements |
Vincent Boudreau and David S Meyer |
| Corruption |
Paul Heywood |
| PART THREE: NEW AND EMERGING ISSUES IN COMPARATIVE POLITICS |
|
| Electoral Authoritarianism |
Andreas Schedler |
| Electoral Corruption |
Sarah Birch |
| Comparative Federalism |
David McKay |
| Human Rights |
Todd Landman |
| Governance |
Philip Keefer |
| Terrorism |
Jennifer S Holmes |
| Comparative Regional Integration and Regionalism |
Fredrik Söderbaum |
| Transitional Justice |
Paola Cesarini |
| The globalization of comparative public opinion research |
Pippa Norris |