Publication | Closed Access
Explaining African Coups d'Etat
29
Citations
33
References
1986
Year
ColonialismInternational Comparative PerspectiveAfrican DiasporaPolitical BehaviorSocial SciencesDemocracyAfrican American StudiesImportant Political PhenomenaPolitical SystemAfrican DevelopmentPublic PolicyAfrican ConflictInternational RelationsComparative PoliticsAfrican PoliticsComparative Political AnalystsWorld PoliticsEmpirical GeneralizationsAfrican Coups D'etatPolitical PluralismGlobal PoliticsPolitical TransformationPolitical Science
Comparative political analysts seek empirical generalizations which will hold water across systems and over a period of time. Yet, modeling important political phenomena over more than a handful of countries is still rather unusual. One focus for substantial comparative research has been the coup d'état—an irregular change of governmental leadership by force—in African countries. Scholars who have engaged in this research find they have various conceptual and methodological differences of opinion. In this Controversy , Robert Jackman and Rosemary O'Kane raise the issues in dispute. Their contentions are answered by Thomas Johnson, Pat McGowan, and Robert Slater. The exchange highlights important research issues without necessarily resolving them.
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