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Comparative Politics Textbooks Case studies; thematic; little comparison Draper and Ramsay, The Good Society Comparative; cases archetypes of distinct patterns Empirical and normative ○ How states compare? (similarities, differences) ○ What constitutes the good society? ○ Why are some countries better at promoting human development? Institutional ○ Different institutions (rules governing political, economic, and social life) produce different outcomes The Good Society Capability approach Good society meets minimal conditions that permit people (if they choose) to flourish Political institutions distribution of power; exec/leg/jud; regime type Economic systems state-market relations Political conflict cleavages, group identities, parties Regime -- cluster of institutions, policy, and politics Rich democracies ○ Social democratic (Sweden), conservative (U.S.), Christian democratic (Germany) ○ Developing states ○ Developmental dictatorships (S. Korea); predatory (Nigeria); fragmented democracies (Brazil); developmental democratic (Chile) Russia and China Which set of institutional arrangements provide citizens with most capability? Good Societies Wealth, level of economic development (GDP/capita) insufficient Includes desirable/undesirable goods/services Does not account for many desirable goods Does not capture wealth/income and other inequalities The good society Meets physical needs (food, healthcare, housing, etc.) Insures physical safety (security, freedom from violence) Promotes informed decisions (access to education) Protects civil and political rights (speech, religion, etc., due process and equal protection) Capability approach Importance of each individual’s capability Physical well-being, safety, informed decision-making, civil and political rights (SPIR) Goal of good society: possible for each individual to have high capability No particular set of institutions necessary State’s responsibility to create conditions in which individuals can choose high capability Criticisms Idealistic not impossible; some states do better than others Human nature/self-interested mixed bag, range of behaviors; dramatic differences in performance; not overarching obstacle; function of institutional arrangements Cultural relativism cultures not homogenous; often conflictual; cultures change, evolve; not impartial Institutions Draper and Ramsay argue institutional arrangements shape a country’s ability to enhance citizen capability Different institutional arrangements (ways of organizing economic, social, and political life) yield different results Institutions: formal (written laws) and informal (cultural norms) rules that structure relationships among individuals Constrain individual behavior; exert power Create regularity, predictability Provide structure and meaning; “the grammar of our lives” Make social life possible Shape expectations, preferences, and behavior Institutions and Politics Institutions organize politics, struggle for power in groups, organizations, and state Groups struggle for influence over institutions because they: Exert substantial power over us Tend to be enduring, self-reinforcing ○ people adjust expectations, behavior, and interests around them; develop stake in maintenance; raises cost of changing them Not neutral ○ benefit some groups more than others ○ shape and reflect distribution of power ○ those with power design institutions to preserve and enhance advantage Shape nature of political conflict Institutional Approach Potential problem – Institutions appear as iron cages, negating power of choice Trouble accounting for political change Institutions are not hard and fixed; they shift and change Political coalitions that bring them into existence and support them change Respond to new imperatives and accommodate powerful new actors Culture and ideology influence political behavior Culture, ideology, and institutions Culture and ideology influence political behavior People subject to power of institutions and ideas Ideas and values guide how people respond to institutional openings Institutions exert variety of influences, which may conflict Values people hold, meanings they give to facts, come between hard logic of institutions and how people construct their interests and act on them Institutions shape actions and are shaped by them Power of ideas especially important during periods of crisis and uncertainty Discussion questions 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. How do we make sense of human nature when countries differ in terms of human capabilities; i.e., some countries are better than others at promoting human development? Is GDP per capita an inadequate standard for judging “the good society”? If you had to choose one of the four criteria from the capability approach as the most important, which would it be and why? Rights are the only necessary component of the good society because they can be used to obtain the other three. Do you agree? What are the ways institutions can change? What are the factors that make them more or less resistant to change? What are the major benefits and drawbacks of institutions? How does the capability approach relate to the institutional approach? In particular, how can institutions shape a country’s ability to achieve the good society?