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Charles C. Ragin and Claude Rubinson: The Distinctiveness of Comparative Research, p. 13; Paul Pennings, Hans Keman, and Jan Kleinnijenhuis: Global Comparative Methods, p. 35; Darren Hawkins: 3 Case Studies, p. 50; James A. Caporaso: Is there a Quantitative-Qualitative Divide in Comparative Politics? The Case of Process Tracing, p. 67; Jan W. van Deth: 5 Establishing Equivalence, p. 84; Willfried Spohn: Comparative Political Sociology, p. 101; Vivien A. Schmidt: 7 Comparative Institutional Analysis, p. 125; Thomas Plumper: Comparative Political Economy, p. 144; Stephen E. Hanson: The Contribution of Area Studies, p. 159; John M. Hobson: Comparative Politics and International Relations, p. 175; Herbert Kitschelt: Post-Industrial Democracies: Political Economy and Democratic Partisan Competition, p. 193; Wolfgang C. Müller: Government Formation , p. 227; Josep M. Colomer: Institutional Design, p. 246; Shaun Bowler: Comparative Political Behaviour: What is being Compared?, p. 263; Barbara Geddes: Changes in the Causes of Democratization through Time, p. 278; Christian Welzel: Political Culture, p. 299; Jack A. Goldstone: Revolution, p. 319; Vincent Boudreau and David S. Meyer: Social Movements, p. 348; Paul Heywood: Corruption, p. 362; Andreas Schedler: Electoral Authoritarianism, p. 381; Sarah Birch: Electoral Corruption, p. 395
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