The book examines the significant impact of key political figures in Great Britain and the US on transformative societal changes. It delves into their roles and decisions, highlighting how their leadership shaped political landscapes and influenced historical events. Through detailed analysis, it sheds light on the interconnectedness of their actions and the broader implications for both nations.
In recent years, the usual optimization techniques, which have proved so useful in microeconomic theory, have been extended to incorporate more powerful topological and differential methods, and these methods have led to new results on the qualitative behavior of general economic and political systems. These developments have necessarily resulted in an increase in the degree of formalism in the publications in the academic journals. This formalism can often deter graduate students. The progression of ideas presented in this book will familiarize the student with the geometric concepts underlying these topological methods, and, as a result, make mathematical economics, general equilibrium theory, and social choice theory more accessible.
Focusing on the mathematical theory of voting, this volume synthesizes two centuries of intellectual development, particularly the contributions of Borda and Condorcet. Norman Schofield presents his extensive research in a coherent framework, enhancing the understanding of voting arrangements. The book serves as a significant resource for students of democracy, including philosophers, political scientists, and economists, offering profound insights into social choice and democratic processes. Schofield's work represents a major initiative in this field, uniting previously scattered findings.
The contents of this volume are drawn from the seventh International Symposium in Economic Theory and Econometrics, and represent recent advances in the development of concepts and methods in political economy. Contributors include leading practitioners working on formal, applied, and historical approaches to the subject. The collection will interest scholars in the fields of political science and political sociology no less than economics. Part I outlines relevant concepts in political economy, including implementation, community, ideology, and institutions. Part II covers theory and applications of the spatial model of voting. Part III considers the different characteristics that govern the behaviour of institutions, while Part IV analyses competition between political representatives. Part V is concerned with the way in which government acquires information held by voters or advisors, and Part VI addresses government choice on monetary policy and taxation.
Simple, elegant, and powerful, tools are available in user-friendly, free
software to help design, build, and run models of social interactions, even on
the most basic laptop. Focusing on a well-known model of housing segregation,
this Element sets out the fundamentals of what is now known as 'agent based
modeling'.
In this Element we develop: stochastic models, which add a crucial element of
uncertainty to human interaction; models of human interactions structured by
social networks; and 'evolutionary' models in which agents using more
effective decision rules are more likely to survive and prosper than others.
Explores the growth area of positive political economy within economics and
politics. This book explains the spatial model of voting from a mathematical,
economics and game-theory perspective.
Fiction created by and for the working class emerged worldwide in the early twentieth century as a response to rapid modernization, dramatic inequality, and imperial expansion. In Japan, literary youth, men and women, sought to turn their imaginations and craft to tackling the ensuing injustices, with results that captured both middle-class and worker-farmer readers. This anthology is a landmark introduction to Japanese proletarian literature from that period. Contextualized by introductory essays, forty expertly translated stories touch on topics like perilous factories, predatory bosses, ethnic discrimination, and the myriad indignities of poverty. Together, they show how even intensely personal issues form a pattern of oppression. Fostering labor consciousness as part of an international leftist arts movement, these writers, lovers of literature, were also challenging the institution of modern literature itself. This anthology demonstrates the vitality of the “red decade” long buried in modern Japanese literary history.
This book presents a set of original and innovative contributions on state, institutions and democracy in the field of political economy. Modern political economy has implied the interaction between politics and economics to understand political, electoral and public issues in different nations, and in this volume a group of leading political economists and political scientists from Europe, America and Asia provides theoretical advances, modelling and case studies on main topics in political economy. The analysis of the role and performance of politics and democracy in diverse nations implies the study of the organization of the state, lobbying, political participation, public policies, electoral politics, public administration and the provision of public services. This book provides advances in the research frontier of these topics and combines historical evidence, institutional analysis, mathematical models and empirical analysis in an interdisciplinaryapproach. Political and social scientists, economists and those interested in the performance of states, democracy and elections can find new research results in this volume.
This book presents latest research in the field of Political Economy, dealing with the integration of economics and politics and the way institutions affect social decisions. The focus is on innovative topics such as an institutional analysis based on case studies; the influence of activists on political decisions; new techniques for analyzing elections, involving game theory and empirical methods.