This course is meant to provide an introduction to Political Science to students who have not had any exposure to the discipline. This is an introductory paper to the concepts, ideas, forms of Government and Political Theories. It seeks to explain the evolution and usage of these concepts and theories, both historically and analytically.
Meaning ,Nature and significance of Political Science;
Meaning of Politics- Liberal and Marxian Schools
Concepts-Liberty (Negative and Positive, views of Mill, Laski, C.B. Mcpherson & Marx)
Equality (Definition, Meaning , Nature, Types of equality, Relation between Liberty and Equality)
Theories of Justice; Subaltern and Feminist perspectives
Notion of Common Good (Gandhian perspective of Sarvodaya)
Elite Theory (Views of Pareto, Mosca, Mitchell, C. Wright Mills, Tom Bottom ore & J. Schumpeter)
Organs of the Government- Legislature, Executive and Judiciary;
Their functions with recent trends
Forms of Government- Democracy and Dictatorship;
Political Parties and Pressure Groups
Ø Barrie Axford, Gary Browning, Richard Muggins &Ben Rosamond, Politics: An Introduction, Routledge, New York,2002
Ø John Hoffman, Paul Graham, Introduction to Political Theory, Dorling Kindersely Publishers, London, 2007
Ø A Appadorai, Substance of Politics, Oxford University Press, Madrass,1968
Ø Julliet Mitchel, "Women and Equality" in Anne Philips (ed.), Feminism and Equality, New York University Press, New York, 1987
Ø C.B.Macpherson., The Life and Times of Liberal Democracy, Verso, London, 1977