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005 | 20220221172304.0 | ||
008 | 200202s9999 xx 000 0 und d | ||
020 | _a140211705 | ||
082 | _a320.3 FIN | ||
100 | _aFiner, S.E. | ||
245 | 0 | _aComparative Government | |
260 | _a"Middlesex, Eng." | ||
260 | _bPenguin Books | ||
260 | _c1984 | ||
300 | _a615 p. | ||
520 | _aThis book is meant as my introduction to the study of politics. I have written it for my students and for the general public. In it I have tried to present a vision of the ubiquity of political behaviour, and the paradoxical omnipotence and frailty of the effort to channel and domesticate it which is what we call government'. Deliberately, I have set out to systematize, simplify and codify our ever-widening, ever-flowing range of data and circumstances, so as to provide a first - and I really mean a first - step on a long journey which I hope will absorb and enchant. Why I should attempt this is best explained in terms of personal history. I have been teaching in this field for over twenty years, I still hold the perhaps old-fashioned view that undergraduates need more attention than graduates and beginning students more attention than the senior ones; and so over this period, I have considered it a matter of honour and duty and indeed of love to give the first year introductory course in comparative government. The first rudimentary approach to this book was initiated in lectures I gave at Cornell University in 1962. Then, at Keele University I modified it substantially, in the years 1963-6. But the book as it now stands follows and elaborates the First Year undergraduate course in government which I have been giving at the University of Manchester. Indeed, it is the written version of this course: somewhat less picturesque and mediterranean than my lectures, but fuller, more nuancé, and, I hope, rather more elegant. thot much in the book records | ||
650 | _aComparative Government | ||
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