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The American Political System 3rd Edition by Ken Kollman, ISBN-13: 978-0393675283

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Description

The American Political System 3rd Edition by Ken Kollman, ISBN-13: 978-0393675283

[PDF eBook eTextbook]

  • Publisher: ‎ W. W. Norton & Company; Third Edition, 2018 Election Update (June 10, 2019)
  • Language: ‎ English
  • 695 pages
  • ISBN-10: ‎ 0393675289
  • ISBN-13: ‎ 978-0393675283

A contemporary framework without the fluff, updated through the 2018 elections.

Table of Contents:

The American Political System 3E, Full Edition

Title Page

Copyright

Dedication

Contents

Preface

Chapter 1: Introduction

What can the tools of political science tell us that we don’t already know?

Understanding American Politics

Institutions

Collective Dilemmas and the Need for Government

Types of Collective Dilemmas

Collective Action Problems

Prisoner’s Dilemma Situations

Coordination Problems

Comparing Collective Action Problems and Coordination Problems: Example from Voting

Unstable Coalitions

Principal-Agent Problems

Designing Institutions

In Comparison: Types of Government Institutions

Analyzing Politics and Government Using the Tools of Political Science

Further Reading

Key Terms

Chapter 2: The Constitution

How does the Constitution strike a balance between preserving order and protecting liberty?

What Do Constitutions Accomplish?

Origins of the American Political System

The Revolution

The Declaration of Independence

The Colonial and State Constitutions

The Articles of Confederation

The Constitutional Debates

Difficult Compromises

Institutional Features of the Constitution

A President as Executive

A Bicameral Legislature

An Independent Judiciary

Separation of Powers

Checks and Balances

Federalism with National Authority over the States

Reserved Powers for the States

Amending the Constitution

The Ratification Debate

Federalists versus Antifederalists

The Bill of Rights

In Comparison: National Constitutions

Constitutional Evolution

Relative Powers of the Branches of Government

Interests, Institutions, and Outcomes: The Constitution and Religion in Politics

National Power versus States’ Rights

Direct Election of the President and Senators

Rights and Liberties

Consequences of the Constitution

Data Exploration: The Costs and Benefits of a Longer Constitution

Further Reading

Key Terms

Chapter 3: Federalism

Why have the states and the American people allowed the federal government to become more and more p

Federation and Confederation

Federalism as a Response to Collective Dilemmas

The Dynamics of American Federalism

The Courts and the Constitution

Toward a Stronger National Government

Progressive Era, 1896–1913

New Deal Era, 1933–52

Great Society Era, 1964–77

Recent Trends

Federal Financing

Federalism and Race

Data Exploration: Where Does Federal Money Go, and Why?

State Governments

The Institutions of State Government

State Power

Local Governments

Interests, Institutions, and Outcomes: Federal and State Conflicts over Marijuana

Special Districts

In Comparison: American Federalism

Evaluating American Federalism

Avoiding Tyranny

Preserving Diversity

Fostering Competition

Promoting Unity and Experimentation

Negative Consequences of Federalism

Federalism as a Difficult but Important Balance

Further Reading

Key Terms

Chapter 4: Civil Rights and Liberties

What rights and freedoms do Americans have?

Defining Civil Rights and Liberties

The Origins of Rights and Liberties

The Special Role of the Courts

Race, Ethnicity, and Nationality

Slavery and African Americans

The Treatment of Immigrants

Other Failures

Popular Demands for More Rights

The Civil Rights Movement

Other Movements

Incorporating the Bill of Rights into the Fourteenth Amendment

Government Responses to Discrimination

Affirmative Action

Abortion Rights

Interests, Institutions, and Outcomes: Access to What Others Have: Rights of the Disabled

Rights Related to Sexual Identity

In Comparison: Rights and Liberties around the World

Data Exploration: Civil Liberties and National Security: A Trade-Off

Why Protect Rights and Liberties?

Further Reading

Key Terms

Chapter 5: Congress

How do legislators rise above self-interest and the narrow interests of their districts to pass impo

Congress and the Constitution

Bicameralism

Making Law

Congressional Elections

Causes of Individualism in Congress

Representing the District or State

Internal Institutions of Congress

An Increasingly Institutionalized Congress

Party Leaders

Committees

Other Internal Features

The Process of Lawmaking

Proposals

Referrals

Committee Action

Moving Bills to the Floor

Senate Distinctiveness

Interests, Institutions, and Outcomes: A Sit-In for Gun Control

Floor Action

Conference Committees

Presidential Signature

Making Law in a System of Separation of Powers

In Comparison: Legislative Institutions

Data Exploration: Does Gerrymandering Matter?

Analyzing Collective Dilemmas in Congress

Three Models for Analyzing Congress

Further Reading

Key Terms

Chapter 6: The Presidency

How and why has presidential power grown?

Sources of Presidential Power

Constitutional Bases of Presidential Power

Solving Collective Dilemmas and Principal-Agent Problems since the Founding

Shaping the Modern Presidency

Nineteenth-Century Changes

Through the Twentieth Century and into the Twenty-First

Enhancing Presidential Power through Military and Economic Means

Today’s Powerful Presidency

The Veto

Executive Orders, Executive Agreements, and Signing Statements

Appointments

Interests, Institutions, and Outcomes: Abortion Funding and the Use of Executive Orders

Solving Collective Dilemmas with Administrative and Financial Resources

In Comparison: Executive Forms

Data Exploration: The Politics of Executive Orders

Checks on Presidential Power

Investigations and Impeachment

Electoral Pressures

Institutionalizing Presidential Power to Solve Collective Dilemmas

Further Reading

Key Terms

Chapter 7: The Bureaucracy

Who controls the bureaucracy? And does it work?

What Is the Federal Bureaucracy?

Why Do We Need a Federal Bureaucracy?

Solvers of Collective Dilemmas

Principals and Agents in the Executive Bureaucracy

The Motivations of Bureaucrats

Bureaucracy’s Principal-Agent Problems

Bureaucrats as Policy Makers

How Has the Bureaucracy Changed?

The Early Years

Growth in Size

The Spoils System

Civil Service Reform

Modern Reforms of the Bureaucracy

Privatization and Marketization

Shaping and Influencing the Bureaucracy

Appointments

Budgeting

Oversight

Interests, Institutions, and Outcomes: Bureaucratic Budget Battles

The Courts’ Influence

Interest Groups

In Comparison: Bureaucratic Traditions

Data Exploration: Do Bureaucrats Behave Differently than Elected Officials?

Two Views of Bureaucracy

The Progressive Vision of a Fair, Competent, and Impartial Bureaucracy

The Democratic Vision of a Bureaucracy Responsive to the Wishes of Politicians Elected by the People

Further Reading

Key Terms

Chapter 8: The Judiciary

Are the courts above politics?

Courts and Collective Dilemmas

Prisoner’s Dilemmas

Coordination Problems

Independence and Legitimacy

Constitutional Basis

Establishing Judicial Power

Judicial Review

Supremacy of Federal Courts and Federal Law

The Court of Last Resort

Organization of the American Judiciary

Types of Cases

Standing and Class Actions

Federal Courts

State Courts and the Electoral Connection

Jurisdiction at the Federal and State Levels

Common Law and Legal Precedent

Path of a Supreme Court Case

Choosing Cases

Legal Briefs

Oral Arguments

The Conference

Opinion Writing

In Comparison: The Judiciary

Selecting Judges

Judicial Review

How Political Are the Courts?

Minority Rights versus Majority Rule

Analyzing Judicial Behavior

Data Exploration: Ideology on the Supreme Court

Public Opinion, Congress, and the Federal Courts

The Politics of Judicial Appointments

Interests, Institutions, and Outcomes: The Politics and Strategies of Judicial Confirmations

Further Reading

Key Terms

Chapter 9: Public Opinion

What is the link between public opinion and politicians’ behavior?

Public Opinion in a Democratic System

What Is Public Opinion?

The Challenge of Having Many Principals

Measuring Public Opinion

Early Attempts at Measurement

Random Sampling

Possible Biases

Alternative Methods to Surveys

Where Do Political Attitudes Come From?

Socialization

Interests, Institutions, and Outcomes: Meta-Analysis: A Response to the Cell Phone Era

Interests and Rationality

Group Attachments

Emotions

Influence of Elites

Predispositions

Ideology

Party Identification

Other Predispositions

Opinions on Policies and Politicians

Policy Opinions

Evaluations of Politicians and Government Institutions

Apathy and Lack of Knowledge

Rational Ignorance?

Apathy and Non-Attitudes

In Comparison: Public Opinion

Public Opinion and Policy Making

Data Exploration: Income, Policy Preferences, and Outcomes: Do the Rich Win?

Does Government Policy Follow Public Opinion or Vice Versa?

Further Reading

Key Terms

Chapter 10: Poltical Participation

Why do groups with the greatest interest in changing the status quo have relatively low turnout rate

Participation and Democratic Politics

Conventional and Unconventional Participation

Collective Dilemmas in Participation

Tallying the Costs and Benefits of Participating

Registering to Vote

Gathering Information

Voting

Participation beyond Voting

Interests, Institutions, And Outcomes Voter Turnout

The Struggles for Voting Rights

Restricting the Right to Vote

Challenges to Reforms Intended to Increase Turnout

Removing Barriers to Voting

Group Struggles

Patterns of Participation in the United States

Trends in Voter Turnout

The Demographics of Participation

In Comparison: Political Participation

Data Exploration: Does the Cost of Voting Affect Turnout?

The Crucial Role of Institutions and Mobilization

Further Reading

Key Terms

Chapter 11: Interest Groups and Social Movements

How can well-organized, narrow interests influence government in ways that go against the preference

What Are Interest Groups, and What Do They Do?

Inside and Outside Lobbying

Campaign Financing

Interests, Institutions, and Outcomes: The Costs, Benefits, and Politics of Tax-Exempt Status

Collective Dilemmas and Interest Group Politics

Collective Action Problems

Overcoming Collective Action Problems

Coordination Problems

Determining Interest Group Influence

Social Movements

Deeper Analysis of Social Movements

In Comparison: Group Politics

Data Exploration: What Does Lobbying Look Like Up Close?

Organized Forms of Public Pressure

Further Reading

Key Terms

Chapter 12: Political Parties

Why are political parties and partisanship so widely criticized, but also so indispensable in a demo

What Are Parties?

Parties in Government

Parties as Organizations

Parties in the Electorate

The History of the American Party System

The First Party System

The Second Party System

The Third Party System

The Fourth Party System

The Fifth Party System

The Sixth Party System

Understanding Transitions to New Party Systems

Why Two Parties?

The Electoral System

National–State Political Relations

Interests, Institutions, and Outcomes: Sore-Loser Laws: Anti­Democratic, Smart Tactics, or Both?

Major-Party Actions

In Comparison: Parties

Two Parties versus More Parties

Party Discipline

Data Exploration Do the Rich (Candidates) Get Richer? Fund­Raising and Political Parties

Key Intermediate Institutions of Democracy

Further Reading

Key Terms

Chapter 13: Elections and Campaigns

Do campaigns matter in national elections, and if so, how?

What Do Elections Accomplish?

Determining Policy Direction and Ideology

Choosing Competent, Non­Corrupt Leaders

American Electoral Institutions

State­Level Election Laws

Plurality Rule

Election Ballots

Direct Democracy

American Electoral Campaigns

Getting on the Ballot

Raising Campaign Money

Campaign Rhetoric and Prisoner’s Dilemmas

Interests, Institutions, and Outcomes: Caucuses and Primaries: Who Goes First?

Campaigning with Modern Technologies

Voter Decision Making

In Comparison: Elections

Different Formal Electoral Institutions

Party­Centered, Ideological Elections

Data Exploration Which Candidates “Go Negative”? And When?

Limited Campaigning

Public Financing of Campaigns

Is There a Need for Reform?

Further Reading

Key Terms

Chapter 14: Mass Media and the Press

Is media bias a problem in American politics?

Mass Media and the Press in a Democracy

Providing Essential Information

Evaluating and Interpreting

Helping Solve Collective Dilemmas

Interests, Institutions, and Outcomes: Verifying Political Statements

Trends in Media and the Press

The Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries

Network Television Comes to Predominate

Rise of New Media

Mass Media Companies and the Profit Motive

Government Regulation

In Comparison: Mass Media

Are the American Press and Mass Media Biased?

Discerning Bias

Ideological versus Other Kinds of Bias

How Can Bias Occur?

Media Effects

Who Chooses Which Media Content and Why?

What Is the Effect of Specific Media Content?

Data Exploration: Do Fact-Checking Organizations Change Candidate Behavior?

Politicians and the Government as Sources

The Media as Principals and Agents

The Press and Mass Media as Principals

The Press and Mass Media as Agents

Further Reading

Key Terms

Chapter 15: Economic Policy

What can governments do about the economy? Why do they sometimes favor one approach over another?

Government and the Economy: Ideas and Historical Trends

Prominent Economic Philosophies

Economic Policy in the Early United States

A Growing Role for Government

Benefits and Costs

Types of Public Goods

Externalities

Purposes of Economic Policies

Distributing Benefits

Redistributing Benefits

Stabilizing the Economy

Regulating Commerce

Promoting Economic Growth

Types of Policies

Monetary Policies

Fiscal Policies

Interests, Institutions, and Outcomes: Independence and Accountability at the Federal Reserve

Trade Policies

In Comparison: Economic Policy

The Politics of Economic Policy Making

Data Exploration: Income Inequality and Politics

Further Reading

Key Terms

Chapter 16: Social Policy

Why are social policies so controversial?

What Are Social Policies?

Historical Perspective

Social Policies at the State and Local Levels

The Growing Role of the National Government

Major Areas of Social Policy

Basic Provisions for the Poor

Social Insurance

Education

Health Care

Interests, Institutions, and Outcomes: Inequality in Public Education: Roots and Reforms

Housing

Crime Prevention

Political Ideologies and Social Policies

In Comparison: Social Policy

Data Exploration: Who Deserves Social Services?

Interest Groups, Parties, and Social Policy Making

Collective Dilemmas among Sectors of Society

The Major Parties and Social Policies

Explaining Political Outcomes

Further Reading

Key Terms

Chapter 17: Foreign Policy

What tools does the United States have to craft foreign policy? When and why does it use them?

Collective Dilemmas and Foreign Policy

Domestic Dilemmas

International Dilemmas

Theories and Strategies of Foreign Policy

Realism

Idealism

Internationalism versus Isolationism

Unilateralism versus Multilateralism

The Democratic Peace as a Motivation

Contemporary Political Science Approaches

Historical Perspective

Tools of Foreign Policy

Basic Tools

Crisis Tools

Making Foreign Policy

Elected Leaders

Bureaucracies

Data Exploration: Who (Do the American People Think) Makes Foreign Policy?

Interests, Institutions, and Outcomes: The Politics of Military Base Closings

Domestic Political Pressures

Foreign Policy Doctrines

Domestic and International Constraints on Foreign Policy

Further Reading

Key Terms

Appendix

The Declaration of Independence

The Articles of Confederation

The Constitution of the United States of America

Amendments to the Constitution

The Federalist Papers

Glossary

Credits

Index

Ken Kollman is the Director of the Center for Political Studies, the Frederick G. L. Huetwell Professor, and Professor of Political Science and Research Professor in the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. His research and teaching focus on political parties, elections, lobbying, and federal systems. He also regularly teaches the introductory American politics course at the University of Michigan. In addition to numerous articles, he has written Dynamic Partisanship: How and Why Voter Loyalties Change, with John E. Jackson (2021), The Formation of National Party Systems: Federalism and Party Competition in Canada, Great Britain, India, and the United States, with Pradeep K. Chhibber (2004), and Outside Lobbying: Public Opinion and Interest Group Strategies (1998).

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