History is replete with instances of what might, or might not, have been. By calling something contingent, at a minimum we are saying that it did not have to be as it is. Things could have been otherwise, and they would have been otherwise if something had happened differently. This collection of original essays examines the significance of contingency in the study of politics. That is, how to study unexpected, accidental, or unknowable political phenomena in a systematic fashion. Yitzhak Rabin is assassinated. Saddam Hussein invades Kuwait. Hurricane Katrina hits New Orleans. How might history be different had these events not happened? How should social scientists interpret the significance of these events and can such unexpected outcomes be accounted for in a systematic way or by theoretical models? Can these unpredictable events be predicted for? Political Contingency addresses these and other related questions, providing theoretical and historical perspectives on the topic, empirical case studies, and the methodological challenges that the fact of contingency poses for the study of politics.Contributors: Sonu Bedi, Traci Burch, Jennifer L. Hochschild, Gregory A. Huber, Courtney Jung, David R. Mayhew, Philip Pettit, Andreas Schedler, Mark R. Shulman, Robert G. Shulman, Ian Shapiro, Susan Stokes, Elisabeth Jean Wood, and David Wootton
Author(s): Ian Shapiro, Sonu Bedi
Publisher: NYU Press
Year: 2007
Language: English
Pages: 304
0814740448......Page 1
Contents......Page 8
Introduction: Contingency’s Challenge to Political Science......Page 10
Part I: Roots of Contingency......Page 28
1 From Fortune to Feedback: Contingency and the Birth of Modern Political Science......Page 30
2 Mapping Contingency......Page 63
3 Resilience as the Explanandum of Social Theory......Page 88
Part II: Contingency’s Challenge......Page 106
4 Events as Causes: The Case of American Politics......Page 108
5 Contingent Public Policies and Racial Hierarchy: Lessons from Immigration and Census Policies......Page 147
6 Region, Contingency, and Democratization......Page 180
Part III: What Is to Be Done?......Page 212
7 Contingency, Politics, and the Nature of Inquiry: Why Non-Events Matter......Page 214
8 Modeling Contingency......Page 231
9 When Democracy Complicates Peace: How Democratic Contingencies Affect Negotiated Settlements......Page 255
10 Contingency in Biophysical Research......Page 275
Contributors......Page 288
Index......Page 292