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Book Review
| Our Enemies and US: America's Rivalries and the Making of Political Science. By Ido Oren. (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2003. xiv, 234 pp. $29.95, ISBN 0-8014-3566-8.)
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| As a rule, American political scientists have not shown much interest in the history of their discipline. In the last two decades, however, that has begun to change, as a small band of political scientists (most of whom are, more precisely, political theorists) have made intriguing inquiries into their discipline's past. Ido Oren's Our Enemies and US is the latest addition to a short but growing list of histories of political science as an academic discipline. It fits nicely alongside and complements David Ricci's The Tragedy of Political Science: Politics, Scholarship, and Democracy (1984), Raymond Seidelman's Disenchanted Realists: Political Science and the American Crisis, 18841984 (1985), James Farr and Raymond Seidelman (eds.), Discipline and History: Political Science in the United States (1993), Farr, John Dryzek, and Stephen Leonard (eds.), Political Science in History: Research Programs and Political Traditions (1995), and David Easton, John G. Gunnell, and Michael B. Stein (eds.), Regime and Discipline: Democracy and the Development of Political Science (1995), as well as more synoptic surveys such as Dorothy Ross's The Origins of American Social Science (1991). |
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