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Good Societies
Chapter One

Pearson Publishing 2011
• Our potential is constrained not only by our innate talents
but the kind of society we live in.
• LBJ: “It is the product of a hundred unseen forces playing
upon a little infant, the child, and finally the man.”
• Dire circumstances can limit people regardless of their
natural gifts.
• Premise of this textbook: some countries are better than
others at creating conditions that permit citizens to realize
their potential.

Good Societies
Pearson Publishing 2011
• Comparative politics examines why societies are organized in
different ways and what effects those differences may have.
• Example: In 2008, infant mortality rates were twice as high in
Zimbabwe as in Botswana.
• Life expectancy was 15 years shorter
• Zimbabwe’s GDP per capita was $200 compared to almost $14K
in Botswana.
• Why is quality of life so much better in Botswana?

• We can make other comparisons: Thailand and Ghana
• Thirty years ago they were roughly at the same developmental
level, but now Thailand has progressed further and faster than
Ghana.

Comparative Politics
Pearson Publishing 2011
• By making comparing these countries we can try to identify
what it is that might explain such divergent outcomes in the
quality of their citizens’ lives.
• We must search for ways in which they differ, such as policies
their governments have followed or different historical legacies.

• Comparative politics enables us not only to compare different
countries, but to appreciate what is distinctive about our own.
• Comparative politics is a subfield of political science and is
distinct from International Relations.
• Comparative politics studies politics within countries while IR
studies politics among them.

Comparative Politics
Pearson Publishing 2011
• We compare all the time.
• However, comparative
political analysis is
different in that it uses
systematic procedures.
• Formation of hypotheses:
these statements present
relationships that we expect
to find among these
variables.
• “if, then” – if a country’s
wealth increases, then its
citizens will be healthier.

The Logic and Practice of
Comparative Political
Analysis
Pearson Publishing 2011

• Dependent variables
• What we are trying to explain

• Independent variables
• What we believe explains the
dependent variable

• Operationalization
• Finding specific, concrete
alternatives to use in place of
abstract concepts like wealth and
health

• Controls
• Hold other factors constant in
order to see whether we still
obtain the same results or if they
were spurious due to other
intervening factors
• Problem: Comparisons of girls and boys in different
countries who took the same math test found that girls on
average had lower scores than boys? Why? Socialization?
• Methods and Hypothesis: Recent study uses comparative
analysis of 40 countries to answer whether sexist
expectations influence girls’ performance.
• Found great variation in performance – big gaps to no gaps.
• Hypothesis: more gender equality (I) in a country the small
the gender game in test scores (D).

Comparative Political Analysis: Does Gender
Equality Help Girls Do Better in School?
Pearson Publishing 2011
• Operationalizing Concepts: Define what it means to “be better
at math” and “gender equality.”
• “math test scores” used results of a math test administered to 15
year olds in 40 countries in 2003.
• Gender equality measured by using the World Economic Forum’s
Gender Gap Index (GGI). The index measures economic, cultural
and political opportunities for women as compared to those of
men.

• Results: Confirmed the hypothesis. In countries where there is
a large gender gap, such as Turkey, there is a large gap in math
scores between boys and girls. In countries where there is
gender equality, such as Sweden, the gap disappears.
• Why do you think this is so?

Comparative Political Analysis: Does Gender
Equality Help Girls Do Better in School?
Pearson Publishing 2011
• Case study
• Comparative cases method
• Comparing many countries
instead of just a few or just one

Three methods to test
hypotheses
Pearson Publishing 2011
Figure 1.1
Pearson Publishing 2011
• Offers us insight into how countries’ political
conditions differ and the consequences those
differences have for them.
• Permits us to check our intuitions about a
country’s politics by examining whether they
apply in other circumstances.
• Permits us to check our intuitions about a
country’s politics by examining whether they
apply in other circumstances.

Value of Comparison
Pearson Publishing 2011
• Permits us to evaluate and form judgments
that help us make sense of the world
around us.
• Empirical and objective
• Normative and moral

• Helps us get to the heart of the question:
What constitutes a good society and why
are some countries better than others at
creating one?

Value of Comparison
Pearson Publishing 2011
• There are certain examples upon which we can all
agree are not good societies:
• Society based on slavery
• Society where one group slaughters another group from a
different ethnic or religious group
• Society where thousands of children die from preventable
diseases…
• These are not hypothetical examples. They exist today.
• Thailand, Rwanda, Angola
• We can agree that none of these constitute good societies.

Visions of the Good Society: GNP
& Gross National Happiness
Pearson Publishing 2011
Figure 1.2
Pearson Publishing 2011
• But what are general criteria we can
use to determine what are good
societies?
• What is the merit of using wealth and
happiness as a criteria?

Visions of the Good Society: GNP
& Gross National Happiness
Pearson Publishing 2011
• By this criterion, Lichtenstein and Luxembourg were
some of the most successful in the world.
• Least successful, Democratic Republic of Congo.
• While GDPs do indicate countries that have money to
send children to school rather than work, and provide
other benefits to society, political leaders are often
dissatisfied with this measure.
• Problem: treats money spent on desirable goods and
services as equivalent to money spent on less desirable
ones – example: cleaning up an oil spill.

Visions of the Good Society: GNP &
Gross National Happiness
Pearson Publishing 2011
• GDP treats money spent on prisons the same as money spent
for education.
• Focus on growth alone may ignore its hidden costs.
• Example: China increase in economic growth, but cost to
increasing inequality, destructive environmental impacts, and
corruption.

• Second problem: omits behavior many of us consider
desirable.
• People caring for aging parents; unpaid work.
• Only measures cold, hard cash.

• Third problem: may hide considerable differences in how
money is distributed.

Visions of the Good Society: GNP &
Gross National Happiness
Pearson Publishing 2011
• Economic development and
wealth is important but it is
only a means to an end.
• Happiness as a goal of a
good society.
• Wealth can help achieve this
happiness.
• More is better only if it
makes us happier.

• Bhutan, located between
China and India
• New constitution in 2008
• Government programs
judged according to the
happiness they produce.
• Four pillars
• Economy, culture,
environment, and good
governance.

• Developed complex
mathematical formula for
measuring happiness.
• World Values Survey
• Investigates how happy
people were in different
countries.

GNP vs. GNH
Pearson Publishing 2011
Figure 1.3
Pearson Publishing 2011
There are good
reasons to be
skeptical of
happiness as an
indicator of the
good society:

1. The happiness standard suffers
from many of the same flaws that
afflict the wealth standard.
•

Overlooks the different ways in which
people find satisfaction. Genghis Kahn
example.

2. While happiness is a good thing, it
is not the only thing.
•

Sustainable environment; hardship and
sacrifice

3. Different cultures do not attach the
same value to happiness.
•

Happiness is also a function of
expectations; Depends heavily
upon one’s reference group.

GNP vs. GNH
Pearson Publishing 2011
GNP

GNH

• Treats all spending as the
same (of equal value)
regardless of the purpose for
which it is used.
• Is not sensitive to issues of
distribution and equality.
• Devalues activity that is not
bought and sold.

• Is indifferent to the ways
people might find
happiness.
• Discounts that people’s
sense of satisfaction may
depend more upon their
reference group or
expectations than upon their
actual circumstances.
• Ignores cultural differences
in the approval or sanction
given to happiness.

In Brief: Criticisms of GNP & GNH as
Measures of the Good Society
Pearson Publishing 2011
• Neither is satisfactory as a standard to evaluate
government performance and the quality of life of a
country’s citizens.
• So what standard is appropriate by which to measure the
good society?
• Most important goal of governments is to provide
individuals with the freedom to develop their potential.
• A good society “enhances the capabilities of people to
pursue the goals important to their own lives, whether
through individual or collective action.” – Hall and Lamont

So what is a good standard?
Pearson Publishing 2011
• Precise
concept/measurement
required.
• Four dimensions that
are essential to
making people free to
live the life they
choose, which apply
in all countries:

1. Meet their physical
needs
2. Live in safety
3. Make informed
decisions
4. Exercise civil and
political rights

Capabilities & the Quality of Life
Pearson Publishing 2011
• Physical well-being
• Nourishment, health
care, and housing –
enough to support a long
life.
• How to measure?
Poverty? Not available
across countries- and
varies across cultures.
Poor in U.S. might be
rich in a third world
country.

• Infant mortality rates
• Newborns highly
susceptible to poor diet,
deadly disease, and
extreme weather.
• Sweden and Japan fewer
than 3 newborn babies
die per 1,000 births.
• Sierra Leone there were
154 deaths for every
1,000 babies born in
2006.
• In Afghanistan nearly 20
percent of babies died
before their first
birthday.

Capabilities & the Quality of Life
Pearson Publishing 2011
• Today, the ability to make choices to improve one’s
quality of life depends on access to information and the
skills to understand its meaning.
• India – right to information law
• Literate and numerate: without skills individuals are “blind”
and cannot make many occupational choices; taken
advantage of by others.
• A Quiet Revolution by Martha Chen – illiterate women in
Bangladesh’s lives were changed when they learned to read.

• One way to assess informed decision making is to
compare literacy rates across countries.

Informed Decision-making
Pearson Publishing 2011
•
•

Profound differences across countries in terms of security. Homicide rates
are a good means to measure these differences in standard safety.
War measures the impact of violent political conflicts.
• Example from the Congo: Only a fraction are combat-related; most of
the loss of life occurred because war can ruin the economy and health
care services. Produces starvation and disease.

Safety
Pearson Publishing 2011
• Without influence over the laws that govern them, people
cannot press for improvements in any of the other areas:
physical well-being, safety, and education.
• Striking improvements in civil rights (such as right to
public accommodations) that the state guarantees to all its
citizens and in civil liberties (such as freedom of speech
or assembly).
• Also improvements in political rights, such as holding
office or voting.
• By 2000 almost all of the world’s people lived in
independent countries, as opposed to colonies of others,
and majority of these countries have universal suffrage
and multiparty elections.

Democracy
Pearson Publishing 2011
• Still there are considerable differences across countries.
• Useful indexes to measure democracy.
• U.S. government’s Millennium Challenge Account program
uses various data sets on democracy to allocate aid among
foreign countries.
• Indexes do vary in terms of quality.
• Best is the Polity IV index – Monty G. Marshall and Keith
Jaggers.
• Rates countries from zero (highly authoritarian) to ten (highly
democratic).

Democracy
Pearson Publishing 2011
• Four categories represent
the minimum that people
need to fulfill their potential
and enhance their lives.
• And they may require
tradeoffs. May not all be
able to exist together at the
same level at all times.
• Goal of good society is to
make it possible for each
individual in a country to
enjoy a high quality of life,
and not just for the average
quality to be high.

Caveats
Pearson Publishing 2011

• This approach does not
specify a particular set of
economic, political, or
social institutions that are
necessary for a good
society.
• This approach does not
assert that it is the state’s
responsibility to ensure that
all individuals thrive. It is
the role of the state to
create conditions in which
persons can choose a
flourishing life.
1.
2.
3.
4.

Meeting physical needs: infant mortality rates
Safety: homicide rates
Informed decision-making: literacy rates
Civil and political rights: the Polity IV Democracy
index

In Brief: Operationalizing
Capabilities
Pearson Publishing 2011
• Many scholars and organizations have adopted the
capability approach.
• U.N. report: “Fundamental to enlarging human choices is
building capability: the range of things that people can do
or be.”
• Critics: too idealistic; contrary to human nature. Another
view: humans are selfish, but this is a good thing
according to some critics.

Responding to Criticisms of
the Capability Approach
Pearson Publishing 2011
Cultural
relativists
believe that it is
inappropriate to
try to establish
criteria for a good
society that apply
to all of the
world’s countries.

• But cultural relativism is not as
innocent or impartial as it appears.
• Legitimize the power of those who
have triumphed over others in the
conflict of prevailing social values.
• Taliban: banned education of girls

• Concept is difficult to apply with
consistency.

Responding to Criticisms of
the Capability Approach
Pearson Publishing 2011
• Comparative politics examines why countries are organized in
different was and what consequences those differences may
have.
• Proceeds systematically: hypotheses, operationally defining
variables, selecting methods to test the hypotheses.
• Methodical approach to answering the question: what is a good
society?
• GNP vs. GNH?
• Capabilities approach: consistent standards to apply in making
normative judgments among competing values within and
between societies.

Conclusion
Pearson Publishing 2011
• What principles does your vision of a Good Society reflect?
What prerequisites do you think the Good Society should
include?
• We use concepts, such as democracy or freedom, all the time.
Or we often say that workers in some country are more class
conscious than workers in another, or that ethnic tensions are
greater here than there. But operationally defining these
concepts so they can be used in comparative political analysis
is tricky and takes a great deal of imagination. How would you
operationally define these concepts (democracy, freedom, class
consciousness, ethnic tension) so they can be compared across
countries?

Critical Thinking Questions
Pearson Publishing 2011
• What are the advantages and disadvantages of the
different comparative methods we reviewed: the case
study approach that examines one country extensively; a
paired country approach that tries to find countries that
are similar to each other so that other variables can be
held constant; or comparisons that involve many
countries so analysts can test their hypothesis against
many cases? Which method do you think is best and
why?

Critical Thinking Questions
Pearson Publishing 2011
• Even if we accept that wealth (GDP per capita) is not
sufficient for the Good Society, do you think it is at least,
necessary?
• What criteria do you believe should be used to evaluate
how states perform?

Critical Thinking Questions
Pearson Publishing 2011
The Good Society in Depth
Costa Rica : Doing more with less
Pearson Publishing 2011
• Wealthier countries are healthier, generally, and have the lowest infant
mortality rates.
• Costa Rica is an exception.
• Small democratic country; 4.5 million people in Central America; one of best
infant mortality records at its income level and nearly matches the rates in the
U.S.
• How do they do it?
• Government’s role in providing necessities for poor mothers and infants: safe
drinking water, adequate nutrition, and basic health care for pregnant mothers
and newborns.
• Has one of the oldest, most established democracies in the Americans.
Competitive political parties and high voter turnout by peasants and workers.
• Government has been controlled by a political party whose leaders were
determined to help the rural poor.
• Groups opposed to its policies were political weak. Doctors, hospitals, and
insurance companies were publically controlled and funded, which weakened
their ability to oppose the government’s policies.

The Good Society in Depth
Costa Rica: Doing more with less
Pearson Publishing 2011

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Chapter 1 CPO2002 Lecture

  • 2. • Our potential is constrained not only by our innate talents but the kind of society we live in. • LBJ: “It is the product of a hundred unseen forces playing upon a little infant, the child, and finally the man.” • Dire circumstances can limit people regardless of their natural gifts. • Premise of this textbook: some countries are better than others at creating conditions that permit citizens to realize their potential. Good Societies Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 3. • Comparative politics examines why societies are organized in different ways and what effects those differences may have. • Example: In 2008, infant mortality rates were twice as high in Zimbabwe as in Botswana. • Life expectancy was 15 years shorter • Zimbabwe’s GDP per capita was $200 compared to almost $14K in Botswana. • Why is quality of life so much better in Botswana? • We can make other comparisons: Thailand and Ghana • Thirty years ago they were roughly at the same developmental level, but now Thailand has progressed further and faster than Ghana. Comparative Politics Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 4. • By making comparing these countries we can try to identify what it is that might explain such divergent outcomes in the quality of their citizens’ lives. • We must search for ways in which they differ, such as policies their governments have followed or different historical legacies. • Comparative politics enables us not only to compare different countries, but to appreciate what is distinctive about our own. • Comparative politics is a subfield of political science and is distinct from International Relations. • Comparative politics studies politics within countries while IR studies politics among them. Comparative Politics Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 5. • We compare all the time. • However, comparative political analysis is different in that it uses systematic procedures. • Formation of hypotheses: these statements present relationships that we expect to find among these variables. • “if, then” – if a country’s wealth increases, then its citizens will be healthier. The Logic and Practice of Comparative Political Analysis Pearson Publishing 2011 • Dependent variables • What we are trying to explain • Independent variables • What we believe explains the dependent variable • Operationalization • Finding specific, concrete alternatives to use in place of abstract concepts like wealth and health • Controls • Hold other factors constant in order to see whether we still obtain the same results or if they were spurious due to other intervening factors
  • 6. • Problem: Comparisons of girls and boys in different countries who took the same math test found that girls on average had lower scores than boys? Why? Socialization? • Methods and Hypothesis: Recent study uses comparative analysis of 40 countries to answer whether sexist expectations influence girls’ performance. • Found great variation in performance – big gaps to no gaps. • Hypothesis: more gender equality (I) in a country the small the gender game in test scores (D). Comparative Political Analysis: Does Gender Equality Help Girls Do Better in School? Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 7. • Operationalizing Concepts: Define what it means to “be better at math” and “gender equality.” • “math test scores” used results of a math test administered to 15 year olds in 40 countries in 2003. • Gender equality measured by using the World Economic Forum’s Gender Gap Index (GGI). The index measures economic, cultural and political opportunities for women as compared to those of men. • Results: Confirmed the hypothesis. In countries where there is a large gender gap, such as Turkey, there is a large gap in math scores between boys and girls. In countries where there is gender equality, such as Sweden, the gap disappears. • Why do you think this is so? Comparative Political Analysis: Does Gender Equality Help Girls Do Better in School? Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 8. • Case study • Comparative cases method • Comparing many countries instead of just a few or just one Three methods to test hypotheses Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 10. • Offers us insight into how countries’ political conditions differ and the consequences those differences have for them. • Permits us to check our intuitions about a country’s politics by examining whether they apply in other circumstances. • Permits us to check our intuitions about a country’s politics by examining whether they apply in other circumstances. Value of Comparison Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 11. • Permits us to evaluate and form judgments that help us make sense of the world around us. • Empirical and objective • Normative and moral • Helps us get to the heart of the question: What constitutes a good society and why are some countries better than others at creating one? Value of Comparison Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 12. • There are certain examples upon which we can all agree are not good societies: • Society based on slavery • Society where one group slaughters another group from a different ethnic or religious group • Society where thousands of children die from preventable diseases… • These are not hypothetical examples. They exist today. • Thailand, Rwanda, Angola • We can agree that none of these constitute good societies. Visions of the Good Society: GNP & Gross National Happiness Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 14. • But what are general criteria we can use to determine what are good societies? • What is the merit of using wealth and happiness as a criteria? Visions of the Good Society: GNP & Gross National Happiness Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 15. • By this criterion, Lichtenstein and Luxembourg were some of the most successful in the world. • Least successful, Democratic Republic of Congo. • While GDPs do indicate countries that have money to send children to school rather than work, and provide other benefits to society, political leaders are often dissatisfied with this measure. • Problem: treats money spent on desirable goods and services as equivalent to money spent on less desirable ones – example: cleaning up an oil spill. Visions of the Good Society: GNP & Gross National Happiness Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 16. • GDP treats money spent on prisons the same as money spent for education. • Focus on growth alone may ignore its hidden costs. • Example: China increase in economic growth, but cost to increasing inequality, destructive environmental impacts, and corruption. • Second problem: omits behavior many of us consider desirable. • People caring for aging parents; unpaid work. • Only measures cold, hard cash. • Third problem: may hide considerable differences in how money is distributed. Visions of the Good Society: GNP & Gross National Happiness Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 17. • Economic development and wealth is important but it is only a means to an end. • Happiness as a goal of a good society. • Wealth can help achieve this happiness. • More is better only if it makes us happier. • Bhutan, located between China and India • New constitution in 2008 • Government programs judged according to the happiness they produce. • Four pillars • Economy, culture, environment, and good governance. • Developed complex mathematical formula for measuring happiness. • World Values Survey • Investigates how happy people were in different countries. GNP vs. GNH Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 19. There are good reasons to be skeptical of happiness as an indicator of the good society: 1. The happiness standard suffers from many of the same flaws that afflict the wealth standard. • Overlooks the different ways in which people find satisfaction. Genghis Kahn example. 2. While happiness is a good thing, it is not the only thing. • Sustainable environment; hardship and sacrifice 3. Different cultures do not attach the same value to happiness. • Happiness is also a function of expectations; Depends heavily upon one’s reference group. GNP vs. GNH Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 20. GNP GNH • Treats all spending as the same (of equal value) regardless of the purpose for which it is used. • Is not sensitive to issues of distribution and equality. • Devalues activity that is not bought and sold. • Is indifferent to the ways people might find happiness. • Discounts that people’s sense of satisfaction may depend more upon their reference group or expectations than upon their actual circumstances. • Ignores cultural differences in the approval or sanction given to happiness. In Brief: Criticisms of GNP & GNH as Measures of the Good Society Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 21. • Neither is satisfactory as a standard to evaluate government performance and the quality of life of a country’s citizens. • So what standard is appropriate by which to measure the good society? • Most important goal of governments is to provide individuals with the freedom to develop their potential. • A good society “enhances the capabilities of people to pursue the goals important to their own lives, whether through individual or collective action.” – Hall and Lamont So what is a good standard? Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 22. • Precise concept/measurement required. • Four dimensions that are essential to making people free to live the life they choose, which apply in all countries: 1. Meet their physical needs 2. Live in safety 3. Make informed decisions 4. Exercise civil and political rights Capabilities & the Quality of Life Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 23. • Physical well-being • Nourishment, health care, and housing – enough to support a long life. • How to measure? Poverty? Not available across countries- and varies across cultures. Poor in U.S. might be rich in a third world country. • Infant mortality rates • Newborns highly susceptible to poor diet, deadly disease, and extreme weather. • Sweden and Japan fewer than 3 newborn babies die per 1,000 births. • Sierra Leone there were 154 deaths for every 1,000 babies born in 2006. • In Afghanistan nearly 20 percent of babies died before their first birthday. Capabilities & the Quality of Life Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 24. • Today, the ability to make choices to improve one’s quality of life depends on access to information and the skills to understand its meaning. • India – right to information law • Literate and numerate: without skills individuals are “blind” and cannot make many occupational choices; taken advantage of by others. • A Quiet Revolution by Martha Chen – illiterate women in Bangladesh’s lives were changed when they learned to read. • One way to assess informed decision making is to compare literacy rates across countries. Informed Decision-making Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 25. • • Profound differences across countries in terms of security. Homicide rates are a good means to measure these differences in standard safety. War measures the impact of violent political conflicts. • Example from the Congo: Only a fraction are combat-related; most of the loss of life occurred because war can ruin the economy and health care services. Produces starvation and disease. Safety Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 26. • Without influence over the laws that govern them, people cannot press for improvements in any of the other areas: physical well-being, safety, and education. • Striking improvements in civil rights (such as right to public accommodations) that the state guarantees to all its citizens and in civil liberties (such as freedom of speech or assembly). • Also improvements in political rights, such as holding office or voting. • By 2000 almost all of the world’s people lived in independent countries, as opposed to colonies of others, and majority of these countries have universal suffrage and multiparty elections. Democracy Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 27. • Still there are considerable differences across countries. • Useful indexes to measure democracy. • U.S. government’s Millennium Challenge Account program uses various data sets on democracy to allocate aid among foreign countries. • Indexes do vary in terms of quality. • Best is the Polity IV index – Monty G. Marshall and Keith Jaggers. • Rates countries from zero (highly authoritarian) to ten (highly democratic). Democracy Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 28. • Four categories represent the minimum that people need to fulfill their potential and enhance their lives. • And they may require tradeoffs. May not all be able to exist together at the same level at all times. • Goal of good society is to make it possible for each individual in a country to enjoy a high quality of life, and not just for the average quality to be high. Caveats Pearson Publishing 2011 • This approach does not specify a particular set of economic, political, or social institutions that are necessary for a good society. • This approach does not assert that it is the state’s responsibility to ensure that all individuals thrive. It is the role of the state to create conditions in which persons can choose a flourishing life.
  • 29. 1. 2. 3. 4. Meeting physical needs: infant mortality rates Safety: homicide rates Informed decision-making: literacy rates Civil and political rights: the Polity IV Democracy index In Brief: Operationalizing Capabilities Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 30. • Many scholars and organizations have adopted the capability approach. • U.N. report: “Fundamental to enlarging human choices is building capability: the range of things that people can do or be.” • Critics: too idealistic; contrary to human nature. Another view: humans are selfish, but this is a good thing according to some critics. Responding to Criticisms of the Capability Approach Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 31. Cultural relativists believe that it is inappropriate to try to establish criteria for a good society that apply to all of the world’s countries. • But cultural relativism is not as innocent or impartial as it appears. • Legitimize the power of those who have triumphed over others in the conflict of prevailing social values. • Taliban: banned education of girls • Concept is difficult to apply with consistency. Responding to Criticisms of the Capability Approach Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 32. • Comparative politics examines why countries are organized in different was and what consequences those differences may have. • Proceeds systematically: hypotheses, operationally defining variables, selecting methods to test the hypotheses. • Methodical approach to answering the question: what is a good society? • GNP vs. GNH? • Capabilities approach: consistent standards to apply in making normative judgments among competing values within and between societies. Conclusion Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 33. • What principles does your vision of a Good Society reflect? What prerequisites do you think the Good Society should include? • We use concepts, such as democracy or freedom, all the time. Or we often say that workers in some country are more class conscious than workers in another, or that ethnic tensions are greater here than there. But operationally defining these concepts so they can be used in comparative political analysis is tricky and takes a great deal of imagination. How would you operationally define these concepts (democracy, freedom, class consciousness, ethnic tension) so they can be compared across countries? Critical Thinking Questions Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 34. • What are the advantages and disadvantages of the different comparative methods we reviewed: the case study approach that examines one country extensively; a paired country approach that tries to find countries that are similar to each other so that other variables can be held constant; or comparisons that involve many countries so analysts can test their hypothesis against many cases? Which method do you think is best and why? Critical Thinking Questions Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 35. • Even if we accept that wealth (GDP per capita) is not sufficient for the Good Society, do you think it is at least, necessary? • What criteria do you believe should be used to evaluate how states perform? Critical Thinking Questions Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 36. The Good Society in Depth Costa Rica : Doing more with less Pearson Publishing 2011
  • 37. • Wealthier countries are healthier, generally, and have the lowest infant mortality rates. • Costa Rica is an exception. • Small democratic country; 4.5 million people in Central America; one of best infant mortality records at its income level and nearly matches the rates in the U.S. • How do they do it? • Government’s role in providing necessities for poor mothers and infants: safe drinking water, adequate nutrition, and basic health care for pregnant mothers and newborns. • Has one of the oldest, most established democracies in the Americans. Competitive political parties and high voter turnout by peasants and workers. • Government has been controlled by a political party whose leaders were determined to help the rural poor. • Groups opposed to its policies were political weak. Doctors, hospitals, and insurance companies were publically controlled and funded, which weakened their ability to oppose the government’s policies. The Good Society in Depth Costa Rica: Doing more with less Pearson Publishing 2011

Editor's Notes

  • #4: Error on page 3 – 1st line should read Zimbabwe not Zambabwe