political science
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chapter 5 ...................................................................................................................... ...
unitary actors as well (Schelling 1980 ). Schools may be committed to treating children equally, but recognize that equity, beca ...
I use the example of a jigsaw puzzle (and puzzles more generally) to demonstrate how conflicting ends might be dealt with. The d ...
may literally take a single piece and successively determine whether it mates with other pieces. Crossword puzzles are examples ...
Different strategies for assembling a puzzle are also likely to work better or worse in different situations. If there are missi ...
Richardson argues that when we have multiple conflicting ends that are incommen- surable, the solution is not to choose among th ...
‘‘overlapping consensus.’’ If this consensus is broad enough, it may be sufficient to support social life, i.e. there may be eno ...
If the puzzle example helps elucidate Richardson’s model of deliberation, we need to also examine where it differs. For Richards ...
the new group was not particularly interested in building grand dams. Rather, they had been schooled in cost–benefit analysis an ...
1990 s, however, Boston had become a model for other cities, both nationally and internationally, for how clergy and the police ...
However, they didn’t remotely have any overall agreement about how to deal with the problem of Boston’s inner city youth violenc ...
How might one puzzle well? Clearly, the most important ability is good percep- tion—the ability to discern which pieces fit toge ...
If one is patient, new possibilities in the form of new options or new information may appear. Wandering aimlessly and patience ...
Forester,J. 1999. Dealing with deep value differences. Pp.463 93inThe Consensus Building Handbook, ed. L. Susskind, S. McKearnan ...
Wildavsky,A. 1979 .Speaking the Truth to Power: The Art and Craft of Policy Analysis. Boston: Little, Brown. Winship,C. 1994. Th ...
chapter 6 ...................................................................................................................... ...
no less serious, but more subtle. In the world of social science, clipboards may be appropriate ritual objects; in the world of ...
some social scientists might be wary of exploring hypotheticals, ‘‘What if... ?’’ questions, those same questions are often cruc ...
but uncertainties and ambiguities as well as layers of distrust and fear, anger and division, interests and desires, too. Here w ...
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