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41 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
The authoritative allocation of scarce values for a society |
David Easton |
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The ability to influence the behavior of others (esp. their decisions) with or without resistance |
Power |
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The legitimate exercise or concrete demonstration of power |
Authority |
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M. Weber’s Tripartite Classification of Authority |
•TRADITIONAL •CHARISMATIC •LEGAL - RATIONAL |
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Authority is rooted in history |
Traditional |
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Authority stems from personality |
Charismatic |
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Authority stems from personality |
Charismatic |
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Authority is grounded in a set of impersonal rules. |
Legal-Rational |
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Authority stems from personality |
Charismatic |
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Authority is grounded in a set of impersonal rules. |
Legal-Rational |
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the systematic study of the state or the government, public policies and political processes, systems, and political behavior. |
Political Science |
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The social science on the theories and practice of politics |
•Analysis on political systems •Study on political behavior |
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Authority stems from personality |
Charismatic |
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Authority is grounded in a set of impersonal rules. |
Legal-Rational |
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the systematic study of the state or the government, public policies and political processes, systems, and political behavior. |
Political Science |
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The social science on the theories and practice of politics |
•Analysis on political systems •Study on political behavior |
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The academic study on power and its distribution in the various types of political systems. |
• Acquisition of power • Demonstration of power• Sustainability of political power |
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Authority stems from personality |
Charismatic |
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Authority is grounded in a set of impersonal rules. |
Legal-Rational |
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the systematic study of the state or the government, public policies and political processes, systems, and political behavior. |
Political Science |
|
The social science on the theories and practice of politics |
•Analysis on political systems •Study on political behavior |
|
The academic study on power and its distribution in the various types of political systems. |
• Acquisition of power • Demonstration of power• Sustainability of political power |
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Political science as a discipline is defined by its |
Substantive |
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Political economy is the study of how economics and politics affect each other |
Political Economy |
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Competition between opposing forces, reflecting a diversity pf opinions, preferences, needs or interests. |
Conflict |
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Working together, achieving goals through collective action |
Cooperation |
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Fields in Political Science |
•Comparative Politics •International Relations •Political Economy •Political Philosophy •Public Administration •Public Policy •Political Behaviour •Law and Jurisprudence |
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Political Science as a Social Science Approaches |
•Positivism •Interpretivism •Rational Choice Theory •Behavioralism •Structuralism •Post-structuralism •Realism •Institutionalism •Pluralism |
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Methods |
•Primary Sources •Secondary Sources |
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"Affairs of the state" |
Aristotle |
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"Who gets What, When and How much" |
Harold Lasswell |
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Some political scientists study the tradition of political philosophies from Plato to the present. This subfield tries to answer questions and develop theories about such abstract issues as ethics, authority, the nature of liberty and freedom, the meaning of civil rights and civil liberties, and how governments should function. |
Political Philosophy |
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Public administration looks into how the government is to be managed-its branches and components among others its finances, its personnel, its resources. |
Public Administration |
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This is a system of laws and regulatory measures enforced by the government and the courses of action or inaction meant for administrative purpose |
Public Policy |
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is a field that deals with the interaction between politics and the individuals |
Political Behaviour |
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Law is always part of the state. Laws are promulgated by the competent authorities which in our present dispensation, is the legislature, local or national. Laws are enacted to have order in the state |
Law and Jurisprudence |
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The Discourse in Political Science |
•State •Government •Politics •Power |
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Paradigms in defining Politics |
•Traditional •Non-Traditional |
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state-centered, institutional |
Traditional |
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Behavioral, personal, relation |
Non-traditional |
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Politics has four 4 functions: |
•Politics as the art of government •Politics as public affairs •Politics as compromise and consensus •Politics as power and distribution of resources |