- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > 英文書
- > Business / Economics
Full Description
Political Process: New Perspectives on the Virginia and Bloomington Schools explores political process as emphasized by the Virginia and Bloomington schools of political economy. Though the Virginia school of public choice and Bloomington school of institutional analysis have risen to prominence through the works of James Buchanan, Gordon Tullock, and Elinor Ostrom; their joint emphasis on political process has been neglected. The chapters in this volume explore the idea of political process through a multi-disciplinary perspective and to better situate both schools in this discussion. Approximately half the chapters make theoretical contributions, proposing new frameworks for understanding how people come together to make collective decisions. The other half examine applied case studies through a process-oriented framework.
Contents
Introduction by Donald J. Boudreaux, Christopher J. Coyne, and Brian Kogelmann
Part I: Theoretical Foundations
Chapter 1: Politics Without Romance, Without Romance: The Meta-Problem for Virginia Political Economy by Jason Lee Byas
Chapter 2: Co-production and the Use of Knowledge in Public Administration by Jordan J. Hunter
Chapter 3: How Public Governance and Markets Became Learning Processes by Mariam Sedighi
Chapter 4: Rule-Based Fiscal Governance: Challenges, Alternatives, and a Path for Reform by Andrew Berryhill
Chapter 5: "Human Wisdom": What Plato Can Teach Us About Technocracy by Eryn Rozonoyer
Chapter 6: James M. Buchanan and the Unromantic Rhetoric of Public Choice by Alexander W. Morales
Part II: Applications
Chapter 7: Aura and the Aesthetics of Constitutional Creation: Knowledge and Representation in the Drafting of the Constitution of the Empire of Japan by Todd Maslyk
Chapter 8: Masquerading Democracies: What Protest Actions Can Inform Us About the True State of the Regime? by Sargis Karavardanyan
Chapter 9: Re-examining Commerce's Impact on Peace and Conflicts by Paa-Kwesi Heto
Chapter 10: Transaction Costs and Authoritarian Institutions: Early Coalition Size and Regime Party-Building by Curtis Bram
Chapter 11: Disaster Recovery, Entrepreneurship, and the American Revolution: Women in the Foundations of American Political Economy by Kirstin Anderson Birkhaug