TY - BOOK AU - Weingast,Barry R. AU - Wittman,Donald A. TI - The Oxford handbook of political economy T2 - The Oxford handbooks of political science SN - 0199272220 AV - HB171 .O915 2006 U1 - 330 22 PY - 2006/// CY - Oxford, New York PB - Oxford University Press KW - Economics KW - Political science N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; 1; The reach of political economy; Barry R. Weingast and Donald A. Wittman --; 2; Voters, candidates, and parties; Stephen Ansolabehere --; 3; Rational voters and political advertising; Andrea Prat --; 4; Candidate objectives and electoral equilibrium; John Duggan --; 5; Political income redistribution; John Londregan --; 6; The impact of electoral laws on political parties; Bernard Grofman --; 7; Legislatures and parliaments in comparative context; Michael Laver --; 8; The organization of democratic legislatures; Gary W. Cox --; 9; Coalition government; Daniel Diermeier --; 10; Does bicameralism matter?; Michael Cutrone and Nolan McCarty --; 11; The new separation-of-powers approach to American politics; Rui J. P. de Figueiredo, Jr., Tonja Jacobi and Barry R. Weingast --; 12; Pivots; Keith Krehbiel --; 13; The political economy of the US presidency; Charles M. Cameron --; 14; Politics, delegation, and bureaucracy; John D. Huber and Charles R. Shipan --; 15; The judiciary and the role of law; Mathew D. McCubbins and Daniel B. Rodriguez --; 16; Constitutionalism; Russell Hardin --; 17; Self-enforcing democracy; Adam Przeworski --; 18; Constitutions as expressive documents; Geoffrey Brennan and Alan Hamlin --; 19; The protection of liberty, property, and equality; Richard A. Epstein --; 20; Federalism; Jonathan A. Rodden --; 21; Social choice; Herve Moulin --; 22; A tool kit for voting theory; Donald G. Saari --; 23; Interpersonal comparisons of well-being; Charles Blackorby and Walter Bossert --; 24; Fair division; Steven J. Brams --; 25; Structure and coherence in the political economy of public finance; Stanley L. Winer and Walter Hettich --; 26; Political economy of fiscal institutions; Jurgen von Hagen --; 27; Voting and efficient public good mechanisms; John Ledyard --; 28; Fiscal competition; David E. Wildasin --; 29; The non-politics of monetary policy; Susanne Lohmann --; 30; Political-economic cycles; Robert J. Franzese, Jr. and Karen Long Jusko --; 31; Voting and the macroeconomy; Douglas A. Hibbs, Jr. --; 32; The political economy of exchange rates; J. Lawrence Broz and Jeffry A. Frieden --; 33; Capitalism and democracy; Torben Iversen --; 34; Inequality; Edward L. Glaeser --; 35; Comparative perspectives on the role of the state in the economy; Anne Wren --; 36; Democratization : post-communist implications; Anna Grzymala-Busse and Pauline Jones Luong --; 37; Paths of economic and political development; Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson --; 38; Authoritarian government; Stephen Haber --; 39; The role of the state in development; Robert H. Bates --; 40; Electoral systems and economic policy; Torsten Persson and Guido Tabellini --; 41; Economic geography; Anthony J. Venables --; 42; International political economy : a maturing interdiscipline; David L. Lake --; 43; National borders and the size of nations; Enrico Spolaore --; 44; European integration; Barry Eichengreen --; 45; Trade, immigration, and cross-border investment; Ronald Rogowski --; 46; Central issues in the study of international conflict; Bruce Bueno de Mesquita --; 47; Ethnic mobilization and ethnic violence; James D. Fearon --; 48; Democracy, peace, and war; Dan Reiter and Allan C. Stam --; 49; Anarchy; Stergios Skaperdas --; 50; Economic methods in positive political theory; David Austen-Smith --; 51; Laboratory experiments; Thomas R. Palfrey --; 52; The tool kit of economic sociology; Richard Swedberg --; 53; The evolutionary basis of collective action; Samuel Bowles and Herbert Gintis --; 54; Questions about a paradox; Kenneth J. Arrow --; 55; Politics and scientific enquiry : retrospective on a half-century; James M. Buchanan --; 56; The future of analytical politics; Melvin J. Hinich --; 57; What is missing from political economy; Douglass C. North --; 58; Modeling party competition in general elections; John E. Roemer --; 59; Old questions and new answers about institutions : the Riker objection revisited; Kenneth A. Shepsle N2 - The Handbook views political economy as a set of methodologies, typically associated with economies, but now part and parcel of political science itself, that are used to explain political and economic phenomena at both the micro and macro level; As such, political economy becomes a grand, if incomplete, synthesis of the various strands of social science. Because institutions are often the subject matter of investigation, this approach incorporates many of the issues of concern to political sociologists and historians. Because political behavior and institutions are themselves a subject of study, politics becomes the subject of political economy. And because political economy also deals with the interaction between the political and economic spheres, economics itself can be seen as a special subset of the analysis. This handbook surveys the field of political economy, with 59 chapters ranging from national to international, institutional to behavioral, and methodological to substantive. Chapters on social choice, constitutional theory, and public economics are set alongside ones on voters and pressure groups, macroeconomics and politics, capitalism and democracy, and international political economy and international conflict ER -