Political Process: New Perspectives on the Virginia and Bloomington Schools explore the concept of political process using insights from the Virginia and Bloomington schools of political economy. The chapters examine the processes of collective decision-making theoretically and through applied case studies from multiple disciplines.
Political Process: New Perspectives on the Virginia and Bloomington Schools explore the concept of political process using insights from the Virginia and Bloomington schools of political economy. The chapters examine the processes of collective decision-making theoretically and through applied case studies from multiple disciplines.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Dr. Donald J. Boudreaux, professor of economics, George Mason University; senior fellow Dr. Christopher J. Coyne, professor of economics, George Mason University; associate director Dr. Brian Kogelmann, associate professor of philosophy and political science at Purdue University
Inhaltsangabe
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
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
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