Category: Political Science Essay Examples
See our collection of political science essay examples. These example essays are to help you understanding how to write a political science essay. Political science is not merely an academic discipline, and political scientists do not just study the anatomy of politics. Political science is renewed with every political administration and with every major political event and with every political leader. Influential political leaders construct their own -isms (Fidelism/Castroism, Maoism, Gandhism, Reaganism, and so on) so that the political philosophies and ideologies that undergird the discipline have to be reinvented constantly. Also, see our list of political science essay topics to find the one that interests you.
Rudolf Hilferding (1877–1941) was a leading Austro-Marxist theorist and political figure in the German Social Democratic Party (SPD). Author of Finance Capital: A Study of the Latest Phase of Capitalist Development (1910), classical Marxism’s most important political economy work after Marx’s Capital (1867), Hilferding introduced the term organized …
Hindu political thought has shifted throughout history. On the one hand, the classical Hindu tradition contains almost a disinterest for political issues; on the other hand, the modern phase of Hinduism includes a strong growth of political Hinduism. The Role Of Politics In Classical Hinduism Of the numerous …
Historical interpretation is a scholarly approach to issues that emphasizes the study of the past to develop solutions to contemporary problems. It is based on the efforts to explain past events and analyze them in order to provide an understanding of cause and effect or cost-benefit analysis. Historical …
The comparative historical method approaches social science research involving the over-time exploration of long processes within as well as between a small number of cases. The goal is to arrive at generalizable theories concerning the origins of macro phenomena, such as revolutions, the welfare state, and political regimes. …
Historicism maintains that all human thought rests on indemonstrable presuppositions that are unknown to the thinker—presuppositions that vary from one historical epoch to another. It is a powerful paradigm that underlies much of social and political inquiry since the beginning of the twentieth century. In political theory, historicism …
Born in Malmesbury, England, Thomas Hobbes (1588–1679) was a philosopher and political theorist widely renowned for his 1651 book Leviathan, arguably the single-greatest work of political philosophy in the Anglo-American tradition. Leviathan brings together parts of Hobbes’s previously published writings, including the 1642 Latin work De Cive and …
Leonard Trelawney Hobhouse (1864–1929) was an English political theorist, sociologist, and activist. In addition to being the leading thinker of new liberalism, he was one of his era’s most engaged public intellectuals and was instrumental in the establishment of sociology as an autonomous academic discipline. Born on September …
John Atkinson Hobson (1858–1940) was a British political economist and theorist who sought to defend liberalism while attaching a social element to it. His move to London in 1887 and his exposure to the plight of the urban industrial poor awakened his interest in the problems of unemployment …
American Arthur N. Holcombe (1884–1977) was one of the twentieth century’s most prolific and respected political scientists. He received his doctorate in 1909 from Harvard University and taught there until his retirement in 1955. He also served at national universities in China, the College of Europe, Claremont College, …
The capitalized term Holocaust emerged in the 1950s and, over the next two decades, gradually replaced the German term Endlösung (final solution) for the macro killing project of European Jews by Nazi Germany. Holocaust originally possessed a sacrificial meaning as a burnt offering and, because of its misleading …
The issue of homeland security took on new meaning in countries around the world after the attacks on the United States on September 11, 2001 (9/11). The surprise attacks proved that at-will countries could be successfully attacked if they were not prepared to defend themselves. The attacks occurred …
The term homelessness implies the lack of a fixed, regular, stable, and adequate nighttime abode. The homeless, as defined by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, include persons whose primary nighttime residences are in transitional housing. In most societies, cultural perceptions determine the terms used to …
Homophobia refers to aversion, bias, or discriminatory actions, attitudes, or beliefs directed toward individuals who either have or are perceived as having nonheterosexual identities such as gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, and queer people (GLBTQ).The term came into its contemporary usage in the late 1960s and early 1970s, when …
Sidney Hook (1902–1989) was an American philosopher, Marxist, and exponent of pragmatism. Born in Brooklyn, New York, he graduated from City College in 1923 and received his PhD from Columbia University in 1927.While at Columbia, he absorbed the tradition of American pragmatism from one of his professors, John …
Richard Hooker (1554–1600) was one of the preeminent Anglican theologians of the sixteenth century and is still considered one of the most influential expositors of the Anglican ecclesiastical, social, and political vision. Born in 1554 in Exeter, England, Hooker attended Exeter Grammar School and entered Corpus Christi College, …
Max Horkheimer (1895–1973) was a German philosopher and sociologist. His name is primarily linked to the Frankfurt school, of which he is considered to be one of the founding fathers. Born in Stuttgart to a Jewish family, Horkheimer studied philosophy and psychology in Munich. He then moved to …
The Horn of Africa (alter natively north-east Africa, and sometimes Somali peninsula) is a peninsula of East Africa that extends for hundreds of miles into the Arabian Sea and lies along the southern side of the geostrategic ally important waterway of the Gulf of Aden. It is the …
Branko Horvat (1928–2003) was a Croatian economist and one of the most active public intellectuals of former socialist Yugoslavia. He is best known for his work on Marxist economic theory in general and the theory of the labor-managed firm in particular. His approach is sometimes referred to as …
The Human Development Index (HDI) measures socioeconomic development and serves as an alternative to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita as an indicator of material advancement. The HDI incorporates three dimensions of human progress: a long and healthy life, knowledge and education, and a decent standard of …
By the end of the twentieth century, humanitarian intervention had become one of the most controversial issues in the debate on international relations and foreign policy. It entails forced intervention in the territory of another state in the name of humanitarian aid or humanity. In the first decade …