The Encyclopedia of Political Science offers scholars and students
easy access to the essential concepts in political science in the
early twenty-first century. Organized by traditional subfields,
such as political theory, comparative politics, international
relations, and public policy, it also incorporates those fields
that have emerged more recently, for example, race and
ethnicity, gender studies, and political economy. In addition,
the content reflects the blurring of boundaries increasingly
prevalent in political science—whether this occurs in association
with cultural studies, neurology, history, or economics.
Biographical entries provide a sense of the history of the
discipline, and methodological entries suggest the variety of
approaches—sometimes used singly and sometimes in combination—
available for studying politics. There is material that
gives background on countries, theorists, and theories, and
there are entries on terms that everyone should know and
entries on terms only specialists require.