Jack Hayward: British Approaches to Politics: the Dawn of a
Self-Deprecating Discipline
P. J. Kelly: Contextual and Non-Contextual Histories of Political
Thought
Noël O'Sullivan: Visions of Freedom: the Response to
Totalitarianism
Alan Ryan: The Critique of Individualism
Rodney Barker: Pluralism, Revenant or Recessive?
Vernon Bogdanor: Comparative Politics
Jeremy Richardson: Pressure Groups and Parties: A 'Haze of Common
Knowledge' or the Empirical Advance of the Discipline?
William L. Miller: Electoral Systems, Elections and Public
Opinion
Geoffrey Marshall: The Analysis of British Political
Institutions
Christopher Hood: British Public Administration, Dodo, Phoenix or
Chameleon?
Charles King: Nations and Nationalism in British Political
Studies
Archie Brown: The Study of Totalitarianism and Authoritarianism
Tim Dunne: A British School of International Relations
Brian Barry: The Study of Politics as a Vocation
`Review from previous edition Just as there is a growing desire,
especially in the United States, that we broaden our effective
approaches to the study of politics, we are fortunate that this
brilliantly edited set of essays on the British tradition by their
leading theorists and analysts has appeared. An excellent addition
to any University library and to any graduate introduction to
political science.
'
Alfred Stepah, Wallace A. Sayre Professor of Government, Columbia
University
`This encyclopedic assessment of the contributions of twentieth
century British students of politics is, like a fine travelogue, a
pleasure to read and enlightening as well. It should be of interest
to scholars well beyond
the shores of Britain.
'
Professor Robert Putnam, Malkin Professor of Public Policy, Harvard
University
`The most certain recommendation I can make is that this is an
excellent book for insiders, very valuable for young academics,
graduate students and final-year undergraduates contemplating
graduate work ... an impressive and useful work of scholarship.
'
Anthony H. Birch, Government and Opposition
`A rich source for reflecting on how the discipline has evolved,
what it is and where it is going.'
Andrew Gamble, Times Higher Education Supplement
`This book is a testament to the advances made in the study of
politics in Britain, particularly in the last four decades ... [It]
is a gem from several perspectives and an excellent way to obtain a
background on the professional development of political science in
Britain...
'
T.P. Wolf, British Politics Group Newsletter (of the American
Political Science Association).
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