The close connection between time and politics is central to many political debates. Turbulence, emergencies, and crisis politics have led to criticism about the marginalization of deliberative institutions, notably parliaments, as time pressures appear to have concentrated decision-making in small circles. Non-majoritarian institutions that do not follow electoral rhythms, such as central banks, are said to have gained in power. Some observers fear that democracy is being "timed out". By contrast, many analysts of public policy criticize democracy for its electoral time horizons. Some argue that policy-making for the long term, as, for example, in environmental policy, should be dealt with outside the realm of electorally accountable, "short-termist" institutions. Scholars of international relations have highlighted the importance of time rules and time pressures in structuring international negotiations. Normative and empirical political theorists have emphasized the temporal "subtext" to many of political theory's analytical concerns, such as intergenerational justice. The Oxford Handbook on Time and Politics is the first major publication that surveys time-centered research in political science across its sub-disciplines. As such, it integrates and consolidates an emergent body of knowledge, but also aims to inspire future scholarship. The Handbook highlights that paying systematic attention to time in political analysis yields questions and insights that are of relevance to a very broad range of political scientists working within different theoretical, methodological, and epistemological traditions. The Handbook covers comparative politics and government; public policy; international relations; and political theory and is written by authors drawn from more than a dozen countries, making it a critical resource for scholars and students across a broad spectrum of the discipline of political science.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- 1. Time, Politics and Political Science
- Klaus H. Goetz
- Part I: Time and Comparative Politics and Government
- 2. The Temporal Constitution of Democracies
- Andreas Schäfer and Wolfgang Merkel
- 3. Temporality of Authoritarian Regimes
- Alexander Libman
- 4. Time and Regime Change
- Matthew Wilson
- 5. Endogenous and Exogenous Election Timing
- Petra Schleiter
- 6. Time Rules and Time Budgets in Legislatures
- Michael Koß
- 7. Political Leadership in the American Presidency: Four Temporalities
- Stephen Skowronek
- 8. Staggered Terms in Majoritarian and Non-majoritarian Institutions
- David M. Willumsen
- 9. Objective and Subjective Time in Comparative Politics
- Stephen E. Hanson
- 10. Varieties of Time in Comparative Historical Analysis
- Marcus Kreuzer
- Part II: Time and Comparative Public Policy
- 11. Temporality and the Analysis of Policy Processes
- Michael Howlett
- 12. Political Budget Cycles: Conditioning Factors and New Evidence
- Linda Goncalves Veiga, Giorgios Efthyvoulou, and Atsuyoshi Morozumi
- 13. Incrementalism and its Alternatives
- Kai Wegrich
- 14. Time, Sustainability and Public Policy
- Holger Straßheim
- 15. How Is the Future Unknown? Strategies for Preparing for an Uncertain Future
- Mark van Twist and Martijn van der Steen
- 16. Crises in Time: Fast- and Slow-Burning Crises in the European Union
- Leonard Seabrooke and Eleni Tsingou
- 17. Studying Time with Qualitative Comparative Analysis
- Martino Maggetti
- Part III: Time and International Relations
- 18. Time in International Relations Theory
- Andrew R. Hom
- 19. Time in International Organizations and International Organizations in Time
- Eugenia C. Heldt
- 20. Time and Moral Reasoning: Contexts, Narratives and Institutions
- Piki Ish-Shalom
- 21. Time and Global Capitalism
- Wayne Hope
- Part IV: Time and Political Theory
- 22. Time and Separation of Powers
- William E. Scheuerman
- 23. The Origins of Temporal Legitimacy: Normative Political Theory and Time
- Andre Santos Campos
- 24. Time and Democratic Deliberation
- Corrado Fumagalli
- 25. Intergenerational Justice and Institutions for the Long Term
- Iñigo González-Ricoy
- 26. The Temporal Turn in Political Science: Where Next?
- Klaus H. Goetz