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Journal Article
New Political Science (2009) 31 (1): 3–26.
Published: 01 March 2009
...-year time period—between 1998, the year he was first elected president, and December 2007. This content analysis examines media output from a number of influential newspapers: The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The Washington Post. Using an inductive approach, I identify and critically...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2023) 45 (3): 555–558.
Published: 01 September 2023
... and representations (as do traditional media with which critical political science conventionally contends) but produce instead rendered outputs based on Bayesian probability calculations. Thus the challenge before us is to theorize criticism vis-a-vis the technical ontologies of the algorithm dispositif. © 2023...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1983) 4 (1): 5–19.
Published: 01 March 1983
... the enlarged output of goods and services made possible by a rising rate of productivity advance. " On the threshold of an age of abundance, American society would henceforth be characterized by universal distribution, expanded consumption. and declining working hours. How quickly the optimism has been dashed...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2020) 42 (1): 129–131.
Published: 01 March 2020
... economic output for the environment or are willing to sacrifice some profit for social equity. Ironically in these days, this is even truer for the United States government than for many large corporations. While car companies develop and promote electric cars and wind energy firms in Republican states...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2017) 39 (4): 473–486.
Published: 01 December 2017
... politics, mentioned above, he distinguished between three phases of research. These are the input phase of research, which includes problem selection and formulation, the conduct of research, and the output of the results. As will be seen, Easton's position on the role of political philosophy...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1985) 6 (1): 95–114.
Published: 01 December 1985
... unable to generate and sustain cultural meaning is compelled to ground its popular support in the provision of consumable values. The effort, according to Habermas, is to engender a civil privatism characterized by "strong interests in the administrative system's output and weak interests...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1984) 5 (1): 69–83.
Published: 01 December 1984
... of capitalism in that it provides the means for the owning classes to maximize the value of their wealth. Growth is also politically important in that the working classes are more readily habituated to their inferior position under conditions of expanding output. In essence, the process of capital accumulation...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2003) 25 (1): 99–112.
Published: 01 March 2003
...-Communist socioeconomic conditions, employing as empirical indicators levels of real GNP growth, per capita income, industrial output, unemployment, inflation, poverty level, and other commonly tested economic indices. What the available empirical evidence will show is a dramatically weakened state capacity...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2020) 42 (3): 357–377.
Published: 01 September 2020
... Sheldon Wolin, "Political Theory as a Vocation," The American Political Science Review 63:4 (1969), p.l07l. lin referring to "American" political theory here and throughout the article, I mean to denote the professional activities and scholarly output of political theorists working at institutions...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2018) 40 (1): 186–198.
Published: 01 March 2018
... the conversion processes and their relationship to outputS:'57In simpler terminology, Easton means that his abstract model is divorced from other "systems;' such as the economic, environmental, social, and cultural systems so that nearly all inputs into the political system are ad hoc"external" disturbances...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1999) 21 (4): 449–461.
Published: 01 December 1999
... failed to assist in modernizing the economies of Eastern Europe, but has been closely linked to the overall decline in output. A marked growth of industry has occurred in precisely those countries that have not followed the dictates of the IMF-in China, where the Communist regime has survived...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1979) 1 (2-3): 93–96.
Published: 01 December 1979
... discipli nes. 4) Outputs resist exact quantification especially across disciplines., 3. The function of universities: Brown maintains that" [the university] provides the services most closely identified with the purposes and operations of a capitalist state: cultivation of personnel for available...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2025) 47 (2): 345–348.
Published: 01 June 2025
... work, critical (self) reflection emerges from historiography. Overall, Hauptmann’s book shows that political science’s history is messy and political . This challenges disciplinary common sense, which somehow naturalizes the final output of what—at the end of an itinerary—is perceived...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2012) 34 (1): 91–93.
Published: 01 March 2012
... sphere of the economy and contribute to the agricultural and industrial output of the country while ignoring the full-time work women were already doing in subsistence farming, providing childcare, and maintaining households. Therefore, in both countries, women were asked to shoulder a greater burden...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2014) 36 (4): 489–503.
Published: 01 December 2014
... when public colleges and universities attain the standards. Second, other states reduce base funding when institutions fail to attain the metrics.7 For reformers, public universities and colleges are inefficient. Too much emphasis is placed on the inputs of public funds or tuition, and not the outputs...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2019) 41 (1): 164–166.
Published: 01 March 2019
... benefits and also generates class power by withdrawing hours from the labor market. While the first two proposals, which reduce labor demand and supply respectively, would liberate free time without decreasing economic output, their third demand for a UBI is necessary to ensure that this newfound time...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2023) 45 (4): 657–659.
Published: 01 December 2023
... of legitimacy in the chapter discussing liquid representation. She identifies three aspects to legitimacy: input legitimacy, which considers who is involved in the decision-making process; output legitimacy, which is concerned with the outcomes generated by the process; and throughput legitimacy, which...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2020) 42 (2): 244–246.
Published: 01 June 2020
..." as neoliberalism's output. The section on "Work," for instance, speaks directly to the implicit feeling that runs throughout popular discourse that jobs have gotten worse: they pay less, they offer less meaning, and they are increasingly scarce. Presentations like these are just small parts of the authors' efforts...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2010) 32 (3): 317–344.
Published: 01 September 2010
... adlninistratively.12 Thus, according to Habermas, systemic output crises of the state apparatus take: the forn1 of a ratiollality crisis in which the adlninistrative system does not succeed in reconciling and fulfilling the in1peratives received from the economic system The rationality crisis is a displaced...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2022) 44 (4): 545–564.
Published: 01 December 2022
..., "Is It Too Late for Growth Review of Radical Political Economics 51, no. 2 (2019): 320-29. @NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE 547 economic output. One important way to achieve this, it is argued, is via reduced work hours. This could potentially reduce emissions via two mechanisms. First, reducing from full-time...
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