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- W2026865624 abstract "Few people would disagree that politics is a contest over ‘who gets what, when, andhow’ (Lasswell 1936). Clearly and inevitably, it involves strategy and tactics,gamesmanship, bargaining, coalition building, and the like. How to ‘win’ at politics hasfascinated humans since the dawn of history. But, until comparatively recently, the ‘howto win’ literature was mainly a collection of pithy insights and proverbs. It was far fromanything resembling a science capable of analyzing, let alone predicting, the relevantstrategic permutations. With the advent and development of rational choice theory-ofwhich game theory (von Neumann and Morgenstern 1944), collective choice theory(Arrow 1951, Black 1958, Buchanan and Tullock 1962, Riker 1962), and economics arebut three branches-all this has changed. Rational choice theory has altered the facenot only of political science, but of sociology and organizational theory. While notdominant, and indeed often controversial in these fields (e.g., Lowi 1992), these newapproaches, grouped under the rubric of rational choice theory, have permanentlyaltered their landscapes. Moreover, beyond influencing the social science disciplines, thenew approaches have had profound effects on the practical world of policy. The wholefield of policy analysis (for better or worse) is heavily influenced by economic modelsand the cost-benefit paradigm. Government policies, big business strategies, andinternational calculations with respect to war and peace are increasingly influenced bymathematical modelling and game theoretic approaches (see, e.g., Bueno de Mesquita etal. 1985, Lewyn 1994)." @default.
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- W2026865624 date "1994-09-01" @default.
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- W2026865624 title "8. Rational choice theory and the politics of education: promise and limitations" @default.
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- W2026865624 doi "https://doi.org/10.1080/0268093940090512" @default.
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