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American politics
American:
Political behavior
Political institutions
Public law
Public policy
State and local politics
Question purpose
Describe, explain, or predict
Scientific Method shortcomings
Only allows for the exploration of data-driven questions
This field is becoming increasingly narrow
The use of the scientific method often neglects important normative questions
There are understudied assumptions and judgements that underlie commonly used data
Research may change the field of study by studying it, a problem especially common in the social sciences
Research often influences behavior
Eg. the Democratic Peace Theory has become US foreign policy, causing the overthrow of regimes in attempting to spread electoral democracies, creating conflict
Observational studies
Data already exists in the world, the researcher gathers it
Researcher observes patterns of connection between independent and dependent variables
Researcher must figure out ways to control for other factors influencing outcomes
Experiments
Researcher manipulates the independent variable to create new data
Researcher accounts for other factors through random assignment to treatment and control groups
Experiments provide higher rates of internal validity compared to observational studies but sacrifice external validity since they are not conducted in the “real world”
The researchers can manipulate the independent variable
Types of observational research
Surveys, statistical analysis, qualitative methodologies
Types of experiments
Experimental surveys, games, field experiments
Collective action goals
Bring about social, political, or economic change
By pooling resources, knowledge, and efforts, collective action can have a greater impact than individual actions
Successful collective action requires effective communication, organization, and leadership
Climate change
Collective action problem example
Everyone will suffer the consequences regardless of how much or how little they contributed to causing it
Consequences, however, are not equally distributed
No single state can address alone
States can’t agree on the share of responsibility that each state has
Solving collective action problems
Build trust through in-person communication
Create viable enforcement mechanisms
Acknowledge capacity for generosity and fairness
Equal reciprocity
American political ideology
American liberalism
More socially progressive
American conservatism
Less socially progressive
Both ideologies combine a set of values and ideas, and it’s not possible to draw a strict line between them
Both ideologies to some extent lack strict internal coherence to a common set of values
Liberalism
Political ideology
Democracy is the “proper” form of government
Intellectual freedom is a right
Freedom of speech, press, religion
Individuals have responsibility over their own values
People have a right to make their own financial decisions
The primary goal of government should be to guard against abuses of power
Government should be as minimal as possible; one person should not make decisions for another
Society is defined by the sum of its parts — the happiest society occurs when all individuals within it are the happiest
Values individualism
Classical liberalism
Political ideology
Societal progress
Focus on individual wellbeing
Limited state power
Economic freedom takes precedence over combatting economic inequality
Modern liberalism
Political ideology
Liberty is expansive
Economic equality may undermine the liberty of low income people
Government intervention is sometimes necessary to protect freedom
Conservatism
Political ideology
Society is defined by more than the sum of its parts — groups create more happiness as groups than members could individually produce for themselves
Values order and structure
Stability is important, people must know where they stand within the society
Develop/maintain standard religious and moral values
Primary goal: “the maintenance of ordered community and of common values”
Classical conservatism
Political ideology
Societal progress
Focus on individual wellbeing
Limited state power
Economic freedom takes precedence over combatting economic inequality
Burkean conservatism
Political ideology
Developed by Edmund Burke
People are irrational and need guidance from authorities
Too much choice can lead to isolation and unhappiness
Traditional morality takes precedence over individual liberties
Socialism
Political ideology
Support of the working class over the upper/ruling class
Shares liberal support of equal individual rights but believes in more government involvement in and regulation of society to protect those rights (especially relating to labor and economics)
Many revolutions occurred in Europe in the early 20th century against the upper classes in the name of instating socialism and communism
Generally done by Communist or Democratic Socialist parties
Marxism-Leninism
Political ideology
Politics is shaped by the conflictual relationships between capitalists and wage laborers
This relationship is inherently exploitative and fundamentally harmful to the working class (”common man”)
There exists a need for a centralized, vanguard party
Not democracy since it’s always exploited by the upper/ruling class
Imperialism has shaped the development of capitalism
Social democracy/democratic socialism
Political ideology
Socialism is compatible with democracy, they’re not mutually exclusive
Economic oppression is just as harmful as political oppression
Socialism can be achieved through peaceful, democratic means
Facism
Government function
Rejection of modern life
Strengthening of national identity and nationalism
Often led by a charismatic figurehead and political leader
Dictatorial rule
Glorification of “mythical war-based societies of the past”
Reactionary movements against social change
Eg. anti-capitalism, anti-communism
No strong ideological underpinnings common to fascism as a whole, but individual fascist movements are formed by strong ideological underpinnings
Generally anti-intellectual and nativist
Anti-democratic
Accepts use of force
Associated with totalitarianism
Neoliberalism
Embraces radical liberalization
Everything is susceptible to corruption, so minimalist government control is ideal
Nationalism
Focus on group national identity over individual identity
Exacerbated by the prevalence of nation-states in modern society
Social contract origins
Can be traced back to thinkers such as Plato and Aristotle, who explored the idea of a mutual agreement or contract between individuals and their society
Enlightenment philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau who popularized the term in "The Social Contract" (1762)
Social contract functions
Forms the basis of democratic governance, as it asserts that political authority is derived from the consent of the governed
Establishes the rule of law, protects individual rights, and promotes social order
Helps to maintain the balance between individual freedom and collective well-being
Procedural justice
Seeks to answer 3 major questions
Is governmental action arbitrary?
Are special basic rights (survival, free speech, privacy) violated?
Are special overriding social needs present?
Due process
Steps:
People can’t be accused of crimes unless they could have been aware of the law before the crime was committed
When people are accused of crimes, they must be told what they’re being charged with and with what evidence, and they must be allowed to gather and present their own evidence to counter the charges
Judges may not interest or bias and must remain attentive
Once a judgement has been made, means for later consideration (appeals) must be available
Peace of Westphalia
Ended the 30 Years War (in the Holy Roman Empire) and the 80 Years War (in the Spain and the Dutch Republic)
Created sovereign states without an international superior governing entity
Individual states largely decide their own systems of law making/enforcement and dispute settlement
The primary goal of international law is to create minimal rules of co-existence
Enduring relationships are optimal but individual states’ needs come first
Cross-border violations should be settled privately
All states are legally equal
Differences may be settled by force
The primary goal of the states as a collective should be maximizing their own freedom
Europe
Place where early economic/political development included
Pre-modern agriculture produced little if any surplus, and poor transportation limited trade by land to a roughly 20-mile radius
There were some exceptions to this limitation
Nobles violently seized control of regions and controlled mills to get surpluses
Kings wanted to monetize the micro-economies in order to get surpluses directly from peasants and create a bureaucracy to challenge the nobles
Merchants monetized the economy through trade and established armed trading cities
Because there were extensive coastlines and waterways in Europe, merchants were a lot more powerful (relatively) compared to kings
Structural functionalism
IR theory emphasizing
Political socialization, recruitment, and communication
Interest articulation and aggregation
Policy making, implementation, and adjucation
Policy making
Conditions and constraints include GDP, the state’s penetration of society, the state’s economic resources, and power relations
Concerns include defense, internal order and security, the allocation of economic resources, research and development, health, education, and social welfare
Sources of power
Natural resources
Human resources
Moral authority and relationships
Industrial, technological, and military capability
Money
Extremely versatile — fungible across many different realms
Institutions, rules, and structures
Lobbyists
Hold informational, relational, and monetary power