Join with a free account for more service, or become a member for full access to exclusives and extra support of WorldSupporter >>

Samenvatting Politieke wetenschap Universiteit Leiden jaar 1 Bachelor Politicologie blok 4

Summary political science

 

Lecture 1: 

This was largely an introduction to the field with no real information that you should know for the exams. 

 

Lecture 2: 

 

Terminology

  • Analytical political theory: study of concepts, ideas and values who are used to describe and explain = conceptualizing 

  • Political theory: a combination of analytical, empirical and normative theories 

  • Normative political theory: How politics should be

  • Normative political science: The use of theories about how politics should be

 

Empirical

  • Facts

  • Describe and explain

  • observational analysis

 

Normative

  • Values

  • How it should be 

  • prescribing and evaluation

  • Argumentational analysis

 

Lijphart: 

 

Empirically descriptive:

  • The Netherlands is a segmented but stable state.

Empirically explanatory:

  • The Netherlands is stable because it has a consensus democracy

Normative prescribing:

  • Segmented states should become a consensus democracy

Normative evaluated:

  • Consensus democracy is better for stability than a competitive democracy. 

 

Lecture 3: ontology and epistemology

 

Discussion about how a closed and final a theory is 

  • How do we look to reality and how do we cope with it

 

Philosophy of Science: philosophical research to assumptions, methods and results of scientific research. 

  • Meta-theory: About the core of reality 

 

  • Ontology: What is? What is knowable

  • Epistemology: What ought to be? How can we know?

  • Methodology: How can it be researched?

 

Ontology

  • If a tree falls, and nobody sees or hears it, did it really fall down? 

  • Theory about being 

  • Is there a world outside of our experiences

  • Material sense (gravity), social sense (culture), perceptions and beliefs

  • Objectivism and constructivism

 

Epistemology

  • What can we know? theories of knowledge

  • What is knowledge? How do we receive knowledge of this world? Are there boundaries about what we can know?

  • Positivism, interpretivism, (critical) realism

 

Objectivism:

  • Objects are independent of our perceptions

  • The world exists even without our knowledge

  • Causality exists even without the human perception

 

Relativism:

  • Reality differs from person to person 

  • Reality isn’t discovered but is made 

  • The world doesn’t have meaning without our perception, but it exists. 

  • Neutrality doesn't exist in research (You use your own language and have bias towards outcomes)

 

Scientific positivism

  • Scientists look objectively 

  • Formulation of general rules that can predict outcomes. 

  • Social laws are coherent to natural sciences. 

 

Hermeneutic

  • To understand instead of explain. You have to interpret their vision and bias as well. 

  • Double hermeneutic: you interpret the world including the knowledge you also have your own bias. 

  • There is a social construct 

 

Critical realism 

  • There is a world that can be discovered

  • THe world is explainable and there are general laws which you can apply to it 

  • Combinations of objectivism and constructivism

 

Lecture 4: behavioralism

 

Behavioralism

  • Why do people behave the way they do 

  • Why? (explanatory) 

  • People (Individuals have the power over institutions)

  • Behavior (empirical and observable)

 

Consists of:

  • Ontology (objectivistic)

  • Epistemology (positivistic)

  • Methodology (privileges & quantitative methods)

 

A good theory consists of 

  • The theory is on the inside coherent and consistent

  • outside of it it is still consistent 

  • Consistent with observation and falsifiable.

 

Lakatos:

  • Not all assumptions have to be falsifiable. Not every assumption is able to be falsifiable. 

 

Lecture 5: rational choice

 

Has the same question as focus as behaviorism:

"Why do people behave the way they do?" 

  • Methodological individualism

  • Unitary actor assumption for collectives

 

The why is filled in by rational choice: The homo economicus chooses to their best interest. 

 

Homos economicus

  • People base their choices on their own benefit

  • Assumption: own benefit and rationality

Homos economicus has interests:

  • Sees all options

  • No change in decisions

  • Transitive

 

Lecture 6: institutionalism

 

traditional institutionalism: origins in law departments

Institutions: formal political arrangements: government organizations, constitutions, legal systems 

looks like normative theories 

  • Description

  • Qualitative 

 

Traditional institutionalism: not concerned with defining their ontology. epistemology or methodology.

They were more busy defining law than explain 

ontology: Naive foundationalism, there is a world outside of our mind

Epistemology: didn’t see itself as a science

Methodology: Qualitative but not systematic: not applying statistics 

 

criticism of traditional institutionalism: 

  • too much emphasis on formal rules and procedures (what about the people)

  • too holistic (what about the parts within)

  • Too much focus on government 

  • Too static 

  • Too descriptive 

  • Lacking methodological rigor (where is the scientific method)

  • Not critical enough of themselves (lack of objectivism)

 

1950s Political science timeline: old institutionalism > Behaviouralism > Rational choice theory > New institutionalism 2000s

 

What were institutions to:

  • old institutionalists/behaviorists/rational choice scholars

    • Define ontology, epistemology, this is important, these are the assumptions

  • Behaviouralist: aggregations of individual actors’ roles, and learned responses. Aggregation as a pile in which it doesn’t matter where 

  • Rational choice: Accumulation of individual choices based on rationality, self-interest and utility-maximizing preferences. Accumulation will add up and solve a collective action problem.

  • Old institutionalists: formal government organizations

 

New institutionalism:

  • Interaction between institutions creates a structure and individual agents

  • Interaction between institutions creates a structure and institutions agents

 

Lecture 7: Constructivism

 

Sociaal constructivism 

  • Material or social meaning

  • Giving interpretation and meaning to your surroundings. This forms your view of the word and not only causes it. 

  • Behavior or reaction can be direct or indirect

  • Can an institution influence your behavior? It is not about causality, but the trigger that forms your behavior or reaction

  • Structure - Agency,  

  • Are ideas, beliefs or interests  exogenous of indogenous?

 

Antifoundationalism is also called constructivism

 

Founders of constructivism:

  • Max Weber

  • Emile Durkheim 

 

Max Weber:

  • Protestants thought people had a worldly call to improve themselves.

  • Calvinists thought people had a fate and are doomed to it. 

 

Iron Cage of Capitalism

 

Almond & Verba 1963

  • Behaviorist - positivist 

  • Causale argumenten en correlaties

 

A post humean view of explanation

  • Any mechanism involving rational choice obviously makes claims about meanings and perceptions 

  • Wendt distinguishes causal and constitutive arguments (Why versus how/what?)

 

Lecture 8: feminism & Marxism

 

Patriarchy: the world is formed by a male view.

 

Feminist: someone who shares a common concern with women's unequal positiom in society, calling into question power relations between women and men traditionally defended as natural

 

According to them, the unequal position is not naturally but mostly socially created.

 

Feminists want to uncover the unequal sides and change them.

 

Feminist waves

  • Wave 1: equal and legal constitutional rights

  • Wave 2: more attention to workplace, family equality, domestic violence and reproductive rights

  • Wave 3: critical of liberal feminism, draws attention to intersectionality, sex-positive

 

Women in politics:

  • Historically, women were excluded from politics

  • Just 15 HoS' and HoG's of 195 countries

  • Also underrepresented in the study and institutes

 

Feminist critiques in malestream politifal science

  • Fudging the footnotes (remarks without scientific data)

  • Assuming male dominance

  • Accepting masculinity as the political ideal

  • Explaining political behavior on unexamined stereotypes of the roles of women

  • Excluding what women have traditionally done from the definition and scope

 

The institutional turn

  • Studying representation (descriptive and substantive

  • Feminizing political parties

 

Marxism

 

Marx: capitalism = exploitation

  • "Marx argued that capitalism was a mode of production  in which one class of people - the bourgeoisie or capitalist class - exploited another class of people - the proletariat or working class"

  • The drive for profit would lead to ever more extreme exploitation, until the alienated proletariat rise up in socialisy revolution

  • This requires class consciousness, created by factories which brought working class people together

 

Marx's materialism 

  • The distribution of material power is starting point

  • The economic base consists of: the mode of production  technologies and instruments, forces of production, and the social class relations which characterize the way in which goods are produced

  • The economic base determines the superstructure of culture, ideology and politics

 

But: the working class is the consumer, without consumers capitalism doesn't stand so there is interdependence.

 

Mensheviks vs Bolsheviks

  • Mensheviks: communism will win democratically

  • Bolsheviks: communism will need a revolution

 

Lecture 9: research methods/design

 

We did a research cycle with one of the theories discussed earlier in the course. In our case behaviorism. The question was: what motivates people in the netherlands to protest against the decision of the supreme court in the United States about abortion? 

 

We made a selection of questions which could have an influence on the main question. This wasn’t part of the things we needed to know for the course. 

 

Lecture 10: The comparative method

 

I have never followed this lecture so it lacks in my summary 

 

Lecture 11: qualitative and quantitative methods

 

Which method should I use?

  • Depends on topic/gap/research question

  • Depends on ontology and epistemology of theoretical approach

  • Depends on choices made at other stages

  • Depends on resources: time, money, manpower, skills

 

Types of data:

  • Data collection

  • Data analysis

 

Quantitative: 

  • Counting stuff

  • Why, how much, how many?

  • Experimental vs observational

  • Data sources: attitudes, opinions, behaviors, content/text analysis, official statistics

Can numbers be quantified, are there enough/is it useful to use quantitative methods?

 

Qualitative:

  • Describing stuff using language

  • Why, what, how?

  • The focus of qualitative methods in political science is on detailed, text based answers that are often historical and or include personal observations and reflection from participants in political institutions, events, issues or processes.

  • Influence of geography: usa has way more quantitative research then any other western country.

  • Distinctive for qualitative: few cases or one case, causes of effects, instead of effects of causes in population

  • Depth over breadth

 

Core attributes of qualitative research:

  • Inductive analysis: exploratory instead of testing hypotheses 

  • Holistic approach: understand a phenomenon

  • Data collection: detailed and depth, research design is adaptable

 

The divide:

  • Skills within one method

  • Sometimes mixed methods 

 

Image

Access: 
Public

Image

Image

 

 

Contributions: posts

Help other WorldSupporters with additions, improvements and tips

Add new contribution

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.

Image

Spotlight: topics

Check the related and most recent topics and summaries:
Activity abroad, study field of working area:
Competences and goals for meaningful life:
Countries and regions:
Institutions, jobs and organizations:

Image

Check how to use summaries on WorldSupporter.org

Online access to all summaries, study notes en practice exams

How and why would you use WorldSupporter.org for your summaries and study assistance?

  • For free use of many of the summaries and study aids provided or collected by your fellow students.
  • For free use of many of the lecture and study group notes, exam questions and practice questions.
  • For use of all exclusive summaries and study assistance for those who are member with JoHo WorldSupporter with online access
  • For compiling your own materials and contributions with relevant study help
  • For sharing and finding relevant and interesting summaries, documents, notes, blogs, tips, videos, discussions, activities, recipes, side jobs and more.

Using and finding summaries, study notes and practice exams on JoHo WorldSupporter

There are several ways to navigate the large amount of summaries, study notes en practice exams on JoHo WorldSupporter.

  1. Use the menu above every page to go to one of the main starting pages
    • Starting pages: for some fields of study and some university curricula editors have created (start) magazines where customised selections of summaries are put together to smoothen navigation. When you have found a magazine of your likings, add that page to your favorites so you can easily go to that starting point directly from your profile during future visits. Below you will find some start magazines per field of study
  2. Use the topics and taxonomy terms
    • The topics and taxonomy of the study and working fields gives you insight in the amount of summaries that are tagged by authors on specific subjects. This type of navigation can help find summaries that you could have missed when just using the search tools. Tags are organised per field of study and per study institution. Note: not all content is tagged thoroughly, so when this approach doesn't give the results you were looking for, please check the search tool as back up
  3. Check or follow your (study) organizations:
    • by checking or using your study organizations you are likely to discover all relevant study materials.
    • this option is only available trough partner organizations
  4. Check or follow authors or other WorldSupporters
    • by following individual users, authors  you are likely to discover more relevant study materials.
  5. Use the Search tools
    • 'Quick & Easy'- not very elegant but the fastest way to find a specific summary of a book or study assistance with a specific course or subject.
    • The search tool is also available at the bottom of most pages

Do you want to share your summaries with JoHo WorldSupporter and its visitors?

Quicklinks to fields of study for summaries and study assistance

Field of study

Follow the author: Luc Berger
Work for WorldSupporter

Image

JoHo can really use your help!  Check out the various student jobs here that match your studies, improve your competencies, strengthen your CV and contribute to a more tolerant world

Working for JoHo as a student in Leyden

Parttime werken voor JoHo

Statistics
1363 1