Suchauftrag: | Auswahl zeigen |
Treffer: | 1 |
1. Verfasser-/Urheberwerk
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Referenz: |
Weingast (2006): The Oxford Handbook of Political Economy
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stabile URL: |
www.pol-oek.de/objekt_start.fau?prj=poloeklit&zeig=15245
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Fremd-URL (ohne Gewähr): |
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im Mehrwert & Co Archiv als: |
PDF
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Verf./Hrsg./KS: |
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Titel: |
The Oxford Handbook of Political Economy
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Ort: Verl.: |
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Jahr: |
2006
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Anmerkung: |
Der Versuche, die "Politische Ökonomie" aus der Synthese verschiedener gesellschaftwissenschaftlicher Ansätze neu zu begründen, muß an der unzulänglichen Bestimmung des eigentlichen Gegenstands scheitern. Es ist verständlich, wenn man das interessante, seinerzeit preisgegebene, heute aber wieder so attraktive Gebiet der klassischen PÖ gerne zurückerobern und zumindest sprachlich besetzen möchte - aber so?
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Faksimile: |
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Deskribierung: |
Lehrbuch/Übersicht/Einführung; Theoretische Arbeit/Modellierung; Positionspapier/Manifest/Beratung/Programm; Historischer Materialismus; Kulturgeschichte/Ethnologie/Anthropologie; Philosophie; Politische Analyse/Politische Wissenschaften; Politische Ökonomie; Soziologie; Wirtschaftspolitik/Finanzpolitik; Volkswirtschaftslehre/Betriebswirtschaftslehre/Managementtheorien
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Inhalt: |
Over its long lifetime, the phrase ″political economy″ has had many different meanings. For Adam Smith, political economy was the science of managing a nation′s resources so as to generate wealth. For Marx, it was how the ownership of the means of production influenced historical processes. For much of the twentieth century, the phrase political economy has had contradictory meanings. Sometimes it was viewed as an area of study (the interrelationship between economics and politics) while at other times it was viewed as a methodological approach. Even the methodological approach was divided into two parts—the economic approach (often called public choice) emphasizing individual rationality and the sociological approach where the level of analysis tended to be institutional.In this Handbook, we view political economy as a grand (if imperfect) synthesis of these various strands. In our view, political economy is the methodology of economics applied to the analysis of political behavior and institutions. As such, it is not a single, unified approach, but a family of approaches. Because institutions are no longer ignored, but instead are often the subject matter of the investigation, this approach incorporates many of the issues of concern to political sociologists.PART I INTRODUCTION
1. The Reach of Political Economy 3 Barry R.Weingast & Donald A.WittmanPART II VOTERS, CANDIDATES, AND PRESSURE GROUPS 2. Voters, Candidates, and Parties 29 Stephen Ansolabehere 3. Rational Voters and Political Advertising 50 Andrea Prat 4. Candidate Objectives and Electoral Equilibrium 64 John Duggan 5. Political Income Redistribution 84 John Londregan 6. The Impact of Electoral Laws on Political Parties 102 Bernard GrofmanPART III LEGISLATIVE BODIES 7. Legislatures and Parliaments in Comparative Context 121 Michael Laver 8. The Organization of Democratic Legislatures 141 Gary W. Cox 9. Coalition Government 162 Daniel Diermeier 10. Does Bicameralism Matter? 180 Michael Cutrone & Nolan McCartyPART IV INTERACTION OF THE LEGISLATURE, PRESIDENT, BUREAUCRACY, AND THE COURTS 11. The New Separation-of-Powers Approach to American Politics 199 Rui J. P. de Figueiredo, Jr., Tonja Jacobi & Barry R.Weingast 12. Pivots 223 Keith Krehbiel 13. The Political Economy of the US Presidency 241 Charles M. Cameron 14. Politics, Delegation, and Bureaucracy 256 John D. Huber & Charles R. Shipan 15. The Judiciary and the Role of Law 273 Mathew D. McCubbins&Daniel B. RodriguezPART V CONSTITUTIONAL THEORY 16. Constitutionalism 289 Russell Hardin 17. Self-EnforcingDemocracy 312 Adam Przeworski 18. Constitutions as Expressive Documents 329 Geoffrey Brennan & Alan Hamlin 19. The Protection of Liberty, Property, and Equality 342 Richard A. Epstein 20. Federalism 357 Jonathan A. RoddenPART VI SOCIAL CHOICE 21. Social Choice 373 Hervé Moulin 22. A Tool Kit for Voting Theory 390 Donald G. Saari 23. Interpersonal Comparisons ofWell-Being 408 Charles Blackorby&Walter Bossert 24. Fair Division 425 Steven J. BramsPART VII PUBLIC FINANCE AND PUBLIC ECONOMICS 25. Structure and Coherence in the Political Economy of Public Finance 441 Stanley L.Winer&Walter Hettich 26. Political Economy of Fiscal Institutions 464 Jürgen von Hagen 27. Voting and Efficient Public Good Mechanisms 479 John Ledyard 28. Fiscal Competition 502 David E.WildasinPART VIII POLITICS AND MACROECONOMICS 29. The Non-Politics of Monetary Policy 523 Susanne Lohmann 30. Political-Economic Cycles 545 Robert J. Franzese, Jr., & Karen Long Jusko 31. Voting and the Macroeconomy 565 Douglas A. Hibbs, Jr. 32. The Political Economy of Exchange Rates 587 J. Lawrence Broz & Jeffry A. FriedenPART IX DEMOCRACY AND CAPITALISM 33. Capitalism and Democracy 601 Torben Iversen 34. Inequality 624 Edward L. Glaeser 35. Comparative Perspectives on the Role of the State in the Economy 642 Anne Wren 36. Democratization: Post-Communist Implications 656 Anna Grzymala-Busse & Pauline Jones LuongPART X HISTORICAL AND COMPARATIVE DEVELOPMENT AND NON-DEMOCRATIC REGIMES 37. Paths of Economic and Political Development 673 Daron Acemoglu & James A. Robinson 38. Authoritarian Government 693 Stephen Haber 39. The Role of the State in Development 708 Robert H. Bates 40. Electoral Systems and Economic Policy 723 Torsten Persson&Guido Tabellini 41. Economic Geography 739 Anthony J. VenablesPART XI INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY 42. International Political Economy: A Maturing Interdiscipline 757 David A. Lake 43. National Borders and the Size of Nations 778 Enrico Spolaore 44. European Integration 799 Barry Eichengreen 45. Trade, Immigration, and Cross-Border Investment 814 Ronald RogowskiPART XII INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND CONFLICT 46. Central Issues in the Study of International Conflict 831 Bruce Bueno de Mesquita 47. Ethnic Mobilization and Ethnic Violence 852 James D. Fearon 48. Democracy, Peace, andWar 869 Dan Reiter & Allan C. Stam 49. Anarchy 881 Stergios SkaperdasPART XIII METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES 50. Economic Methods in Positive Political Theory 899 David Austen-Smith 51. Laboratory Experiments 915 Thomas R. Palfrey 52. The Tool Kit of Economic Sociology 937 Richard Swedberg 53. The Evolutionary Basis of Collective Action 951 Samuel Bowles & Herbert GintisPART XIV OLD AND NEW 54. Questions about a Paradox 971 Kenneth J. Arrow 55. Politics and Scientific Enquiry: Retrospective on a Half-century 980 James M. Buchanan 56. The Future of Analytical Politics 996 Melvin J. Hinich 57. What is Missing from Political Economy 1003 Douglass C. North 58. Modeling Party Competition in General Elections 1010 John E. Roemer 59. Old Questions and New Answers about Institutions: The Riker Objection Revisited 1031 Kenneth A. Shepsle |