Advances in Comparative Historical Analysis

James Mahoney and Kathleen Thelen (eds.)

2. Juli 2015

MPIfG Book

original

Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015
322 pages
ISBN 978-1-107-52563-4 (paperback)
ISBN 978-1-107-11002-1 (hardback)
ISBN 978-1-316-37200-5 (eBook)

» Publisher's page
» Excerpt [PDF]
Mahoney, James, Kathleen Ann Thelen (Hrsg.)
Advances in Comparative-Historical Analysis. Strategies for Social Inquiry. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015.

Abstract

Against the backdrop of an explosion of interest in new techniques for data collection and theory testing, this volume provides a fresh programmatic statement about comparative-historical analysis. It examines the advances and distinctive contributions that CHA has made to theory generation and the explanation of large-scale outcomes that newer approaches often regard as empirically intractable. An introductory essay locates the sources of CHA's enduring influence in core characteristics that distinguish this approach, such as its attention to process and its commitment to empirically grounded, deep case-based research. Subsequent chapters explore broad research programs inspired by CHA work, new analytic tools for studying temporal processes and institutional dynamics, and recent methodological tools for analyzing sequences and for combining CHA work with other approaches. This volume is essential reading for scholars seeking to learn about the sources of CHA's enduring influence and its contemporary analytical and methodological techniques.


Contents

Part I. Introduction
 
1. Comparative-historical analysis in contemporary political science
Kathleen Thelen and James Mahoney 
 
 
Part II. Agenda-Setting Work
 
2. The developmental state is dead: long live the developmental state!
Stephan Haggard
 
3. Coalitions, policies, and distribution: Esping-Andersen's three worlds of welfare capitalism
Jane Gingrich
 
4. Not just what but when (and how): comparative-historical approaches to authoritarian durability
Steven Levitsky and Lucan A. Way 
 
 
Part III. Tools for Temporal Analysis
 
5. Power and path dependence
Paul Pierson
 
6. Critical junctures and institutional change
Giovanni Capoccia
 
7. Drift and conversion: hidden faces of institutional change
Jacob S. Hacker, Paul Pierson and Kathleen Thelen 
 

Part IV. Issues of Method
 
8. The comparative sequential method
Tulia G. Falleti and James Mahoney
 
9. Nested analysis: towards the integration of comparative-historical analysis with other social science methods
Evan S. Lieberman
 
Epilogue: comparative-historical analysis: past, present, future
Wolfgang Streeck


Editors

Kathleen Thelen

Kathleen Thelen is Ford Professor of Political Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a Permanent External Scientific Member of the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies in Cologne, Germany.

James Mahoney

James Mahoney is Gordon Fulcher Professor in Decision-Making and Professor of Sociology and Political Science at the Department of Sociology, Northwestern University.

Weitere interessante Beiträge

Zur Redakteursansicht