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Institutionalism

Contributor(s): Pierre, Jon (Ed.).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: SAGE Library of political science.Publisher: Los Angeles : SAGE Publications, 2007ISBN: 9781412928755.Subject(s): Ciência Política | Institucionalismo | Instituição | Democracia | Democratização | Forma de Estado | Governança
Contents:
IV. Institutional theory and specific institutions (continued) D. Courts 41. A political regimes approach to the analysis of legal decisions - Cornnel Clayton and Dvid A. May E. Parties and interest groups 42. Institutionalization - Agnelo Panebianco, translated by Marc Silver 43. A 'New institutional" perspective on politcy networks - Jens Blom-Hansen F. Democratization 44. Disequilibrium institutions and pluralist democracy - Josep M. Colomer 45. Institutions, path dependence, and democratic consolidation - Gerard Alexander G. Federalism 46. The Joint-Decision trap: Lessons from german federalism and European integration - Fritz W. sCHARPF H. International relations 47. The anatomy of autonomy: An institutional account of variation in supranational influence - Jonas Tallberg 48. New institutionalism and the governance of the single European market - Simon J. Bulmer 49. Taking institutions seriously: How regime analysis can be relevant to multilevel environmental governance - John Vogler 50. Norms, culture, and world politics: Insights from sociology's institutionalism - Martha Finnemore I. Public policy 51. Do institutions really matter? Taxation in industrialized democracies - Sven steinmo and Caroline J. Tolbert 52. How gragmentation can improve co-ordination: setting standards in international telecomunications - Philipp Genschel 53. Altered states: esplaining domestic institutional change - Andrew P. Cortell and Susan Peterson V. Theoretical problems Although the basic logic of institutionalism that institutions do matter tends to be accepted by most versions of institutional analysis, there are a nunber of important issues taht presebt problems for nost of these approaches. Many of these issues are related to change in institutions. Institutional theory is generally effective in explaining persistence but is less effective in coping with change. This section will examine these problems from several perspectives and demonstarte their relevance for theory development A. Creating institutions 54. Institutional design in democratic contexts - Johan P. Olsen 55. The limits of design: Explaining institutional origins and change - Paul Pierson B. Institutionalization and deinstitutionalization 56. Leadership in administration: A sociological interpretation - Philip Selznick 57. Bureaucracy, bureaucratization, and debureaucratization - S. N Eisenstadt 58. Political development and political decay - Samuel P. Huntington 59. The abtecedents of deinstitutionalization - Christine Oliver
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Livro Geral Biblioteca Graciliano Ramos
Livro Geral 4I5973i (Browse shelf) 1 Available 10012271

IV. Institutional theory and specific institutions (continued) D. Courts 41. A political regimes approach to the analysis of legal decisions - Cornnel Clayton and Dvid A. May E. Parties and interest groups 42. Institutionalization - Agnelo Panebianco, translated by Marc Silver 43. A 'New institutional" perspective on politcy networks - Jens Blom-Hansen F. Democratization 44. Disequilibrium institutions and pluralist democracy - Josep M. Colomer 45. Institutions, path dependence, and democratic consolidation - Gerard Alexander G. Federalism 46. The Joint-Decision trap: Lessons from german federalism and European integration - Fritz W. sCHARPF H. International relations 47. The anatomy of autonomy: An institutional account of variation in supranational influence - Jonas Tallberg 48. New institutionalism and the governance of the single European market - Simon J. Bulmer 49. Taking institutions seriously: How regime analysis can be relevant to multilevel environmental governance - John Vogler 50. Norms, culture, and world politics: Insights from sociology's institutionalism - Martha Finnemore I. Public policy 51. Do institutions really matter? Taxation in industrialized democracies - Sven steinmo and Caroline J. Tolbert 52. How gragmentation can improve co-ordination: setting standards in international telecomunications - Philipp Genschel 53. Altered states: esplaining domestic institutional change - Andrew P. Cortell and Susan Peterson V. Theoretical problems Although the basic logic of institutionalism that institutions do matter tends to be accepted by most versions of institutional analysis, there are a nunber of important issues taht presebt problems for nost of these approaches. Many of these issues are related to change in institutions. Institutional theory is generally effective in explaining persistence but is less effective in coping with change. This section will examine these problems from several perspectives and demonstarte their relevance for theory development A. Creating institutions 54. Institutional design in democratic contexts - Johan P. Olsen 55. The limits of design: Explaining institutional origins and change - Paul Pierson B. Institutionalization and deinstitutionalization 56. Leadership in administration: A sociological interpretation - Philip Selznick 57. Bureaucracy, bureaucratization, and debureaucratization - S. N Eisenstadt 58. Political development and political decay - Samuel P. Huntington 59. The abtecedents of deinstitutionalization - Christine Oliver

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