Political Science 241 - Comparative Politics
Civic Nationalism
A sense of national unity and purpose based on a set of commonly held political beliefs.
Sovereignty
A state's ability to govern a given territory.
Legitimacy
"Recognition of the right to rule."
Nation-state
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Nation
A community of people who share a common identity (language, ethnicity) and claim to a territory. Socially constructed, different from states.
Comparative Politics
A major subfield of political science, in which the primary focus is on comparing power and decision making across countries.
Territory
An area with clearly defined borders.
Normative Theory
An argument explaining what "ought" to occur
Nationalism
An ideology claiming that a particular identity group defines a nation and should control a state.
State
An ongoing political community and set of institutions that develops and administers laws and generates and implements public policies in a specific territory.
Monopoly
Control of the entire supply of a valued good or service by one economic actor. Cause of markets failing.
Ethnicity
Emphasis on common history, language, and culture.
Race
Emphasis on common physical/biological characteristics. Often presumed "natural". May be imposed by colonizers
Peace of Westphalia
Ended the 30 Years' and 80 Years' Wars. Principle of state sovereignty established.
External Sovereignty
Equal participation on the international arena, as recognized by the international community of states. (UN)
Hypothesis
Focuses on a particular case or set of cases. States how the researcher expects two variables are related to each other.
Public good
Goods or services that the market cannot provide effectively but everyone wants/needs. Benefits too diffuse or costs too high.
Market Economy
Individuals and firms exchange goods and services in a largely unfettered manner.
Command Economy
State directly controls most aspects of the economy.
Bureaucracy
Key feature of the "modern" state. Part of the executive branch (democracies also answer to legislative branch).
Quantitative Statistical Analysis
Looks at one factor like states or cities to see what makes them different. Country level analysis. Survey research.
Caplitalism
Market economy + private property rights
Comparative Method
Most similar systems design. Most different systems design.
Cultural Nationalism
National unity based on a common cultural characteristic; those people who don't share that particular cultural characteristic cannot be included in the nation.
Single Case Study
One country or community. May trace development through time. Generate theories or test existing ones.
State Secularism
Opposed to any religion in the public sphere.
Absolutism
Power concentrated in a single monarch.
Externality
Prices are set to high or too low.
National Identity
Rights you get from being a member of a nation.
Citizen
Rights you get from being a member of a state. Jus soli: based on birth on the soil. Jus sanguinis: based on bloodlines.
Identity
Set of individuals who each recognize their group membership based on a shared, core trait.
Governance
State capacity to provide political goods.
Failed State
States so weak they lose internal sovereignty.
Weak Sate
States that cannot provide adequate political goods.
Power
The ability of one person or group to get another person or group to do something it otherwise wouldn't do
Natural Monopoly
The control of the entire supply of valued goods or services by one economic actor in sectors of the economy in which competition would raise costs and reduce efficiency.
Government
The particular political actors (parties, politicians) that hold executive office at a given time.
Politics
The process by which human communities make collective decisions
International Relations
The study of politics among national governments and beyond national boundaries.
Dependent Variable
The thing scientists are trying to explain.
Independent Variable
The thing that explains the dependent variable.
Political goods
The things citizens need and want from government. Not adequately provided by private sector.
Correlation
Two variables that are related to each other.
Internal Sovereignty
Ultimate authority within a state.
Empirical Theory
What actually happens. Starts with noticing an actual pattern, then tries to explain it.
Variable
What you're studying. Characteristics of the case or cases being studied that varies across space or time.
Market Failure
When there are only buyers or sellers, or they don't have perfect information, or they don't bear the full costs.