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History of Political Science Traditional Historical, Legalism, Philosophy, Descriptive Modern – “Behavioralism” Political science as “science” Facilitated by development of technology, computers
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Card Reader (1960’s-70’s)
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Tape Unit (1960’s-70’s)
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Other “Revolutions” in Political Science Post-behavioral Revolution (late 1960s) Perestroika Movement
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Is Political Science Arcane?
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Science Effort to understand the world (explain various phenomena) by systematically examining causal relationships among variables Scientific explanation must have both logical and empirical support
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Who Uses Science? Natural sciences – Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Astronomy, etc. Social sciences – Psychology, Sociology, Economics, Criminology, Anthropology, Political Science
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The Business of Social Research Where – universities (teaching vs. research universities), research institutes, government Who – people with Ph.D.’s (with help from graduate students at universities) Outlets for research – conferences, journals, books
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The Business of Social Research Grants NSF Research Foundations
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Why Do Research? To get paid! Because you like it
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Types of Academic Departments Ph.D. Granting Departments 6-year tenure clock for assistant professors >100 departments in the U.S. 2-2 teaching load is the norm All require significant research output to get tenure 6-9 refereed journal articles Book = 3-5 articles Publications must be in respected publication outlets
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Types of Academic Departments M.A. Granting Departments 5-6 year tenure clock for assistant professors > 2-2 teaching load is the norm All require some research output to get tenure
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Types of Academic Departments B.A. Granting Departments (LAC’s) 5-6 year tenure clock for assistant professors 4-4 teaching load is the norm Many (if not most?) require some research output to get tenure
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PS Journals Discipline-wide: American Political Science Review, Journal of Politics, American Journal of Political Science Many specialized journals for different fields
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Subfields in Political Science American Politics Political Institutions Behavior Comparative Politics Regional specialists International Relations IPE International Conflict/Security Etc. Political Theory Public Administration Public Policy
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Specialized PS Journals International Relations World Politics (also comparative politics) International Organization International Studies Quarterly Journal of Conflict Resolution
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Specialized PS Journals Comparative Politics World Politics (also IR) Comparative Politics Comparative Political Studies Many more (some are region specific)
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Ranking PS Journals Garand and Giles 2003 Representative sample of political scientists Subjective evaluations Journal rankings vary by subfield Journal rankings vary by methodological orientation
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What Separates Top Journals from the Rest? The peer-review process (for all peer- reviewed journals) 1.Author sends article to journal editor 2.Editor sends anonymous copy of manuscript to 3 reviewers (other political scientists) 3.Editor makes a decision and informs the author (and sends the three anonymous reviews to author). Possibilities are: Accept Revise and Resubmit Reviewed again by same reviewers, possibly others Reject
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How to be successful in graduate school This is your career – start treating it like one! Treat graduate school like a full time job Join the APSA – now! Start reading job ads – now! Start browsing journals and reading the ones that interest you Start going to conferences Read the PSJR blog
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