Political Science For Dummies. Marcus A. Stadelmann
Iran is a good example where religion provides the government with legitimacy.
Nationalism
Finally, nationalism, defined as pride in one’s country, can be a source of legitimacy. Often newly created states can receive legitimacy from a person or an event that unified the nation and instilled national pride into a population. A good example is the U.S. after the War of Independence against Great Britain. The country had been split on whether to wage a war of independence against British rule, and many colonists didn’t believe in independence. The new country needed to become legitimate. The first president was war hero George Washington, and his name provided legitimacy to the newly established republic. While colonists may not have liked the new constitution or the leaders of Congress, they wanted to support General Washington. Many other prominent leaders, such as Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, followed, providing the country and its newly created institutions with legitimacy.
Chapter 2
Shaping Research in Political Science: Looking at Major Approaches
IN THIS CHAPTER
Discovering what it means to be a traditionalist
Understanding behavioralism
Taking a different approach with post-behavioralism
Creating and comparing political science theories
Checking out historical sociology and rational choice theory
Since its academic beginnings in the late 19th century, three major methodological schools of thought have dominated the discipline of political science; they are traditionalism, behavioralism, and post-behavioralism. This chapter looks at these three schools of thought in detail.
A methodology is a general research strategy used by a political scientist. It dictates how research is undertaken and how results can be interpreted. For example, a methodology determines how data is collected and analyzed.
In addition, political science uses theories to explain behaviors and events. The field of political science deals with three types of theories: grand, medium-range, and narrow-range theory. All of these are also covered in this chapter.
Starting with Traditionalism
Not surprisingly, political scientists in the late 19th century to the 1940s were more like the historians of the day. They picked similar problems to study and used similar techniques to study them. This methodological period is called traditionalism. When using the traditionalist approach, while researching a problem, political scientists would engage in the following activities:
Description: Traditionalist political scientists were descriptive in nature. They described structures and their features in detail instead of trying to explain.For example, when looking at a legislature, such as the U.S. Congress, political scientists described its structures and functions. They discussed in detail the powers given to Congress by the constitution, the way Congress passed bills, and how many committees both Houses of Congress had. In addition, they described electoral laws for countries and how people could run for office. When looking at the U.S. Constitution, political scientists would detail the powers given to all three branches of governments and the relationship between the federal government and states. There was no analysis of how Congress actually worked and how and why members of Congress voted on certain bills.
Formal legalism: Formal legalism refers to traditionalists studying formal structures such as political institutions, examples being legislatures and executives, and focusing on written documents such as constitutions. Traditionalists excluded studying human beings working in these institutions on purpose. In other words, they needed to discuss the structures but ignored the people working in these structures.
Normative theory: Normative theory is an explanation of events and people’s behavior, which includes a researcher’s personal preferences. Instead of being neutral, under this theory, it’s perfectly acceptable to include values, personal preferences, and personal beliefs into research. After creating a normative theory, it isn’t necessary to test it. A great example of traditional research and normative theory comes from American politics. It’s called the Classical Democratic Theory of Voting Behavior and was widely accepted until the1940s. It goes as follows:In a democracy, voters are rational voters.Voters know about issues and candidates’ stances on issues and are able to base their votes on issues and candidate preferences.Voters cast a vote based on knowledge.This is considered a rational vote.Because democracies create these rational voters and the U.S. is a democracy, rational voters exist in the U.S.
Conservativism and the status quo: Political scientists who identified as traditionalists wrote in support of their governments or political regimes. For traditionalists, it was unacceptable to criticize their current government. They did research to support the current regime. Do keep in mind that many political scientists of the time conducted their work in authoritarian regimes (see Chapter 4) and couldn’t, even if they wanted to, publicly criticize their government. Imperial Germany (1871–1918) is a good example of this.
Eurocentrism: Most traditionalists were Eurocentric. All that means is that they focused their work on Europe. And for research purposes, this included the U.S., which was considered European because it was populated by Europeans. The rest of world was colonized and didn’t matter much to political scientists. This didn’t change until the end of World War II, which resulted in the decolonization of most of the world, especially Africa and Asia.
Begin parochial: Most traditionalists believed that the European races were superior to other races found especially in Africa. Political scientists and historians in France, for example, focused on the moral obligation to spread the superior French culture to its African colonies to educate and improve local culture. The inequality of races was one of the most controversial aspects of traditionalism and disappeared from political science research after World War II.
Traditionalism dominated political science for almost a century but started to decline in the 1940s. More and more political scientists felt uncomfortable with its Eurocentric and conservative orientations. Most important, political scientists conducted new empirical studies, which undermined traditionalist theories.
Switching to Behavioralism
Behavioralism is the study of human beings and their behavior. Behavioralism was a direct response to the failures of traditionalism and was an attempt to turn political science and the social sciences overall into real scientific disciplines. For decades, people looked down on the social sciences because they weren’t considered real or hard sciences like biology, chemistry, and physics. The reason was that political scientists didn’t test theories, brought their own values into their research, and couldn’t create universal theories.
A universal theory is a general explanation of behavior and events that has to be able to explain over time (ahistorical) and its explanations have to hold true everywhere. Universal theories