The Profession

European Political Science (2008) 7, 207–219. doi:10.1057/palgrave.eps.2210171

Defining Political Science: A Cross-National Survey

Ronald F Kinga and Cosmin Gabriel Marianb

  1. aPolitical Science Department, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA 92182-4427, USA. E-mail: rking@mail.sdsu.edu
  2. bPolitical Science Department, Babes cedil-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania. E-mail: marian@msu.edu
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Abstract

It has been nearly two decades since Gabriel Almond observed that political scientists tend to sit at 'separate tables'. Surprisingly, there has been no attempt to ask extensively among the members of the profession what they actually believe about its essential meaning, purpose, and trajectory. This paper is based on a questionnaire sent to faculty in more than 500 political science departments worldwide. Respondents were asked to define political science, to list three works that best represent political science as they understand it, and to give their views regarding what political science will be over the next twenty years.

Keywords:

separate tables, political science, profession, political science, epistomology, political scientists, influential

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