Hancock / Carman / Castle | Politics in Europe | Buch | 978-1-4522-4146-3 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 832 Seiten, Format (B × H): 191 mm x 229 mm, Gewicht: 1111 g

Hancock / Carman / Castle

Politics in Europe

Buch, Englisch, 832 Seiten, Format (B × H): 191 mm x 229 mm, Gewicht: 1111 g

ISBN: 978-1-4522-4146-3
Verlag: CQ PR


Thoroughly updated, this sixth edition remains an approachable yet rigorous introduction to the region—the UK, France, Germany, Italy, Sweden, Russia, Poland, and the European Union. Its strong analytic framework and organization, coupled with detailed country coverage written by country experts, ensure that students not only get a robust introduction to each country, but also are able to make meaningful cross-national comparisons. Key updates include the latest in European politics, including recent election results, the content and impact of the Eurozone crisis, the emergence of a new “Nordic model” of welfare capitalism, and coverage of key social and political issues including globalization, terrorism, immigration, gender, religion, and transatlantic relations.
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Weitere Infos & Material


Preface
About the Authors
Chronology of the Eurozone Crisis
Introduction
Part I. United Kingdom, Christopher J. Carman
1.1 The Context of British Politics
1.2 Where Is the Power?
1.3 Who Has the Power?
1.4 How Is Power Used?
1.5 What Is the Future of British Politics
Part II. France, William Safran
2.1 The Context of French Politics
2.2 Where Is the Power?
2.3 Who Has the Power?
2.4 How Is Power Used?
2.5 What Is the Future of French Politics?
Part III. Germany, David P. Conradt
3.1 The Context of German Politics
3.2 Where Is the Power?
3.3 Who Has the Power?
3.4 How Is Power Used?
3.5 What Is the Future of German Politics?
Part IV. Italy, Raffaella Y. Nanetti and Robert Leonardi
4.1 The Context of Italian Politics
4.2 Where Is the Power?
4.3 Who Has the Power?
4.4 How Is Power Used?
4.5 What Is the Future of Italian Politics?
Part V. Sweden, M. Donald Hancock
5.1 The Context of Swedish Politics
5.2 Where Is the Power?
5.3 Who Has the Power?
5.4 How Is Power Used?
5.5 What is the Future of Swedish Politics?
Part VI. Russia, Stephen White
6.1 The Context of Russian Politics
6.2 Where Is the Power?
6.3 Who Has the Power?
6.4 How Is Power Used?
6.5 What Is the Future of Russian Politics?
Part VII. Poland, Marjorie Castle
7.1 The Context of Polish Politics
7.2 Where Is the Power?
7.3 Who Has the Power?
7.4 How Is Power Used?
7.5 What Is the Future of Polish Politics?
Part VIII. European Union, M. Donald Hancock
8.1 The Context of European Union Politics
8.2 Where Is the Power?
8.3 Who Has the Power?
8.4 How Is Power Used?
8.5 What Is the Future of European Union Politics?
Appendix
Index


White, Stephen L.
Stephen White is James Bryce Professor of Politics at the University of Glasgow, and also Visiting Professor at the Institute of Applied Politics in Moscow. He was chief editor of the Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics until 2011, and is currently coeditor of the Journal of Eurasian Studies. His recent publications include Putin's Russia and the Enlarged Europe (with Roy Allison and Margot Light, 2006), Understanding Russian Politics (2011), Developments in Central and East European Politics 5 (coedited, 2013) and Developments in Russian Politics 8 (coedited, 2014). He is currently working on the implications of EU and NATO enlargement for Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus, and on changes in the political elite over the Putin and Medvedev presidencies. He was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 2010.

Leonardi, Robert
Since 2010 he has been Visiting Professor in the School of Government at the LUISS University in Rome and teaches in the field of European public policy. Previously he was a member of the European Institute at the London School of Economics (1991-2010) and held the position of Director General in the Regional Government of Sicily (2008.2009) responsible for the Structural Funds and extra-regional affairs. He has served as a founding member and past president of the Conference Group on Italian Politics and Society and is a current member of the British Academy of the Social Sciences.

Hancock, M. Donald
M. Donald Hancock is professor emeritus of political science at Vanderbilt University. He has previously taught at Columbia University, the University of Texas (UT) at Austin, and the universities of Bielefeld and Mannheim in Germany. Hancock is the founding director of two centers for European Studies—the first at UT Austin and the second, founded in 1981, at Vanderbilt. The latter is now designated the Max Kade Center for European and German Studies (which Hancock has also served as associate director for outreach activities). He is the coauthor (with Henry Krisch) of Politics in Germany (2009), and co-editor and coauthor of Transitions to Capitalism and Democracy in Russia and Central Europe (2000), German Unification: Process and Outcomes (1994), and Managing Modern Capitalism: Industrial Renewal and Workplace Democracy in the United States and Western Europe (1991). Hancock has served as co-chair of the Council for European Studies and as president of the Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Studies and the Conference Group on German Politics. He is currently working on a collaborative study of economic, societal, and military security in the Baltic region.

Nanetti, Raffaella Y.
Raffaella Y. Nanetti is professor of urban planning and policy (UPP) in the College of Urban Planning and Public Affairs, University of Illinois at Chicago, having served as the UPP director in the 1990s at the time of the creation of the new College. She was a member, with Robert D. Putnam and Robert Leonardi, of the study team that carried out the twenty-year longitudinal study of Italian regional and local institutions from which the concept of “social capital” was empirically derived (Making Democracy Work: Civic Traditions in Modern Italy, 1992). Since the mid-1990s she has worked on the application of the concept of social capital to the field of urban planning, focusing on social capital–building strategies to improve institutional performance and to promote and sustain local and regional development.

Safran, William N.
William Safran is professor emeritus of political science at the University of Colorado, Boulder. He has also taught at City University of New York and at the Universities of Bordeaux, Grenoble, and Nice in France and Santiago de Compostela in Spain. He has written numerous articles on French and European politics and on national identity and related subjects. His recent books include The French Polity, 7th ed. (2009); Language, Ethnic Identity, and the State (2005); The Secular and the Sacred: Nation, Religion, and Politics (2002); and Identity and Territorial Autonomy in Plural Societies (2000). He is the founding editor of the journal Nationalism and Ethnic Politics and general editor of Routledge Studies in Nationalism and Ethnicity.

Conradt, David P.
David P. Conradt has been a professor of political science at East Carolina University since 1993. From 1968 to 1993 he was at the University of Florida (Gainesville). He has also held joint appointments at universities in Konstanz, Mannheim, Cologne, and Dresden. Among his recent publications are The German Polity (Tenth Edition); A Precarious Victory: Schr?der and the German Elections of 2002 (2005); and Power Shift in Germany: The 1998 Election and the End of the Kohl Era (2000). He has also published a variety of articles and monographs on German political culture, parties, and elections, including ‘‘The Shrinking Elephants: The 2009 Election and the Changing Party System’’ (German Politics and Society, 2010). In 2005 the president of the Federal Republic awarded him the Merit Cross of the Federal Republic of Germany for his body of work.

Carman, Christopher J.
Christopher J. Carman is the John Anderson Senior Research Lecturer in politics at the University of Strathclyde. He previously taught at Glasgow, Pittsburgh, and Rice Universities. His research specializes in the behavioral and institutional aspects of political representation. He is a co-author of Elections and Voters in Britain (2011), with David Denver and Robert Johns, and Of Conscience and Constituents: Religiosity and the Political Psychology of Representation in America (2011) with David Barker. He has also published a variety of articles on British, Scottish and American politics as well as conducted evaluations of the Scotland’s Public Petitions System for the Scottish Parliament.

Castle, Marjorie
Marjorie Castle is associate professor (lecturer) in political science at the University of Utah. She is the author of two books on Polish politics: Triggering Communism's Collapse: Perceptions and Power in Poland's Transition (2003) and Democracy in Poland (2002), coauthored with Ray Taras.


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