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Imitation and Politics: Redesigning Modern Germany. By Wade Jacoby. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2001. 240p. $42.50 cloth, $17.95 paper

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 January 2004

Helga A. Welsh
Affiliation:
Wake Forest University

Extract

Wade Jacoby's scholarly study successfully marries theory to a detailed, specialized knowledge about the history, political culture, and politics of Germany. German specialists will find plenty of insights, but Jacoby's theoretical framework—parsimonious yet central in its limitation to two crucial variables— stands out. It will stimulate all those interested in the transfer of institutions and, more generally, the transfer of democratic capitalism. For example, the decade-old transitions in Central and Eastern Europe have been referred to as “negotiated” and “imitative revolutions,” but often the implications of such pronouncements are assumed but not explored. Jacoby's study supplies important answers to questions about the conditions that are most likely to render institutional transfer effective—in Germany, Central and Eastern Europe, and elsewhere.

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
2003 by the American Political Science Association

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