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Oligarchic State and Sovereignty

1910 - 1917

During this period, democratization is framed as emerging from schooling, civic virtue, and democratic theory, with education treated as the engine of political participation and democratic culture. Sociological analysis of oligarchic tendencies within party systems, political behavior, and group life across multiple national contexts illuminates how political power concentrates and shapes participation. Political economy becomes the foundation for public policy, governance, and international relations, while studies of war, sovereignty, borders, and geopolitics foreground statecraft and the international order; state-building cross-culturally expands comparative politics across cases like Argentina, France, and broader political society. Historical Significance: Influential works advance a materialist theory of the state as instrument of ruling-class domination and outline a pathway toward a post-revolutionary state withering away, fueling lasting debates on power and legitimacy. They reframe democracy as an experiential, inquiry-driven educational project linking schooling to civic participation, and articulate the iron law of oligarchy within modern parties, emphasizing leadership centralization and restricted participation. Finally, sovereignty studies push beyond formal constitutional structures, stimulating enduring concerns about authority, constitutional design, and the organization of political order.

Democratization emerges from schooling, civic virtue, and democratic theory; education is treated as the engine for political participation and democratic culture across multiple works [2], [6].

Oligarchic tendencies and party systems analyzed sociologically: oligarchy, party organization, political behavior, and the sociology of group life across several national contexts [1], [3], [10], [12].

Political economy as the foundation of political institutions: theoretical economics informing public policy, governance, and international economic relations [4], [8].

War, sovereignty, borders and geopolitics: studies of sovereignty, wartime law, geopolitics, and political boundaries shaping statecraft and international order [7], [13], [14], [15].

State-building and governance across cultures: comparative analyses of political organization, state power, and political development in Argentina, France, and broader political theory of political society [5], [9], [16], [17].

Interwar Political Science

1918 - 1947

Rational Choice Democracy

1948 - 1972

Rational Choice Realignment

1973 - 1979

Structural Institutionalism and Governance

1980 - 2000

Institutional-Behavioral Democratization Paradigm

2001 - 2007

Hybrid Regime Dynamics

2008 - 2014

Populist Polarization and Democratic Fragility

2015 - 2024