James Madison: The Theory and Practice of Republican Government

Przednia okładka
Stanford University Press, 2003 - 381
In recent years, the study of James Madison and his contributions to early American politics has enjoyed a growing audience among scholars and students of modern American politics. Not only did Madison establish the fundamental American concept of pluralism, his appreciation of the logic of institutional design as a key to successful democratic reform still influences modern theory and research.

This book evaluates the legacy of James Madison as the product of a scholarly politician a politician who thought carefully about institutions in the context of action. It brings together thoughtful responses to Madison and his theory from a broad cross-section of modern political science, and views Madison not as an icon or mouthpiece of an era, but as a modern political scientist who was able to implement many of his theoretical ideas in a practical forum.

 

Spis treści

James Madison and Political Science
1
The Sources and Influence
14
Madisons Theory of Public Goods
41
Reassessing
92
Madisonian Separation of Powers
126
Revisiting the Relationship between the Senate
156
Madison against the States
184
The Madisonian Scheme to Control the National Government
217
Institutional Design
243
Vote Trading in the First Federal Congress? James Madison
264
Madison and the Founding of the TwoParty System
302
United States
329
References
351
69
369
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Informacje o autorze (2003)

Samuel Kernell is Professor of Political Science at the University of California, San Diego.

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