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Studying Latin American Politics: Methods or Fads?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2009

Extract

Political scientists refer to the comparison of various governments as being the field of comparative politics. Within that category, those that deal with less-developed countries are said to be specialists in political development, a term that has long been controversial due to its value implications. But within this political development category, there is a strong tendency for scholars to either specialize in a specific country and/or a specific set of countries. The sets are generally geographic, so among political scientists one can be a Latin Americanist, an Africanist, and so forth.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Notre Dame 1980

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References

* This discussion directly results from my period as a visiting scholar at the University of Michigan on a Consortium for World Order Studies fellowship. Several individuals read and gave me helpful criticism on an earlier version of the paper. In particular I would mention Peter G. Snow of the University of Iowa, Yale Ferguson of Rutgers, Hernan Vera of the University of Florida, Margaret Jenks of Lafayette College, and the following from the University of Notre Dame: Peter R. Moody, Ken Jameson, William Phelan and Robert Fatton, Jr. Also the Development Workshop was helpful to my revision.

1 An excellent discussion of the topic is Huntington, Samuel P. and Domínguez, Jorge I., “Political Development” in Handbook of Political Science: Macropolitical Theory, ed. Greenstein, Fred I. and Polsby, Nelson W., vol. 3 (Reading, Mass., 1975)Google Scholar.

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57 Ibid., p. 21.

58 Ibid., p. 20.

59 Ibid., pp. 7–11, 20.

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75 O'Donnell, “Corporatism and the Question of the State.”

76 Kaufman, , “The Patron-Client Concept and Macro-Politics: Prospects and Problems,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 16 (1974)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.