Listing 1 - 10 of 42 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Choose an application
Coalition (Social sciences) --- Game theory --- Equilibrium (Economics)
Choose an application
Progressives have been using divide-and-conquer tactics stolen from conservatives to further their own cause with limited success. This is because such tactics go against everything progressives believe in, and there is no logic or power in trying to use bad strategies to get to a good place. Legislator Krysten Sinema shows how the future of the progressive movement is to be found in unity, alignment and partnership and moving away from being entrenched in identity politics and sub-agendas.
Coalitions --- Politics, Practical --- Coalition (Social sciences) --- Social groups
Choose an application
Game theory --- Economics --- Correlation (Statistics) --- Coalition (Social sciences)
Choose an application
Political systems --- Coalition (Social sciences) --- Coalition governments --- Coalition (Sciences sociales) --- Gouvernements de coalition --- Coalitions.
Choose an application
This book examines how inter- and intra-party coalition-building affects governability in South Korea. Focusing on the Kim Dae-jung administration (1998-2003) as a case study in the failure of a government to turn electoral success into stable governability, or ability to implement reform policies, the book's research draws on two bodies of literature which, though focusing on the same dependent variable (cabinet or government stability), have rarely been used in tandem: coalition research on parliamentary systems and studies of divided government in presidential systems. Youn
Coalition governments --- Coalitions --- Korea (South) --- Politics and government. --- Coalition (Social sciences) --- Social groups --- Cabinet system
Choose an application
With evidence drawn from Argentina, Chile, Mexico, Great Britain, and Hungary, 'Re-forming the State' examines the processes leading to, and the political effects of, market reform experiments and focuses specifically on the patterns of collective action and coalition building that drive privatization. The author's argument calls into question established approaches in the discipline of economics and in the fields of comparative and international political economy. The experience of privatization shows that the public and the private are neither contradictory nor mutually exclusive spheres, and that power relations between them are not necessarily zero-sum. To stress the point, the author borrows from the literature on state formation, which has extensively examined the historical processes of key private groups. The evidence presented shows why and how, by restructuring coalitional and institutional arenas, the state uses marketization to generate political order and to distribute political power. Thus, the author specifies the conditions under which political change is conceived in terms of and channeled through economic policy in other words, how the state is "re-formed" through privatization. 'Re-forming the State' thus highlights how privatization is simultaneously a movement from public to private, but also a movement from non-state to state, as the reduction of state assets leads to institutional changes that increase state capacities for defining and enforcing property rights, extracting revenue, and centralizing administrative and political resources. Hector E. Schamis is Assistant Professor of Government, Cornell University.
Coalition (Social sciences) --- Coalitions --- Elite (Social sciences). --- Nation-state. --- National state. --- Pressure groups --- Privatization --- Privatization --- Privatization
Choose an application
This study examines Latino national political coalitions in the United States with a focus on Chicanos, Puerto Ricans, and Cubans. It argues that Latino national political coalitions are an avenue of political empowerment for the Latino Community, but face social, economic, and political challenges in the Latino community.
Hispanic Americans --- Coalitions. --- Coalition (Social sciences) --- Social groups --- Politics and government. --- Social conditions. --- United States --- Ethnic relations. --- Politics and government
Choose an application
Coalitie (Sociale wetenchappen) --- Coalition (Sciences sociales) --- Coalition (Social sciences) --- Coalitions --- Social groups --- Association --- Group dynamics --- Groups, Social --- Associations, institutions, etc. --- Social participation --- Coalitions.
Choose an application
In 'Coalitions of Convenience', Sarah E. Kreps shows that even powerful states have incentives to intervene multilaterally. Coalitions and international organization blessing confer legitimacy and provide ways to share what are often costly burdens of war.
Coalitions. --- Intervention (International law) --- United States --- Foreign relations --- Military policy. --- Military intervention --- Diplomacy --- International law --- Neutrality --- Coalition (Social sciences) --- Social groups
Listing 1 - 10 of 42 | << page >> |
Sort by
|