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Historical institutionalism:

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The field of 'law and society' often involves the persistence and change of institutions. Historical institutionalism is particularly strong at explaining stability ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Historical institutionalism:


1
International seminar Dynamics of Law and
Society in Europe and Japan
  • Historical institutionalism
  • A brief introduction

2
Introduction
  • Why a theoretical framework?
  • Looking for a common language
  • Helps to move beyond single case studies
  • The theory as mediator between cases in
    comparative research
  • Why historical neo-institutionalism?
  • The field of law and society often involves the
    persistence and change of institutions
  • Historical institutionalism is particularly
    strong at explaining stability
  • Our own research projects

3
Neo-institutionalism
  • Institution a formal or informal, structural,
    societal or political phenomenon that transcends
    the individual level, that is based on more or
    less common values, has a certain degree of
    stability and influences behavior. (Peters)
  • Reaction against
  • Methodological individualism of rational choice
    theories
  • Logic of appropriateness vs. logic of
    consequences
  • Behavioralism in politics
  • Without going back to the old institutionalism
  • Diffferent kinds
  • Sociological neo-institutionalism
  • Historical neo-institutionalism
  • Rational choice neo-institutionalism

4
Historical neo-institutionalism an overview
  • Path dependency
  • Positive feedback cycles
  • Change

5
Path-dependency (1)
  • Narrow definition
  • Once initial policy and institutional choices are
    made, the created patterns will persist
  • Broader definition
  • Includes incremental adaptations to compensate
    for inadequacies of initial choices
  • Specific definition of Mahoney
  • Those historical sequences in which contingent
    events set into motion institutional patterns or
    event chains that have deterministic properties

6
Path-dependency (2)
  • The economic model
  • Path persists because of increasing returns
  • E.g. QWERTY-keybord
  • Problems in political context
  • Initial choice is usually not as open
  • Subsequent path is usually not that deterministic
  • The sociological model
  • Path persists because of shared cognitions,
    shared understandings of the world
  • Problems in political context
  • Obscures conflict
  • Worldviews can change

7
Positive feedback cycles (Mahoney)
  • Feedback cycles ensure institutional
    reproduction in the face of contingent events
  • Utilitarian feedback cycle
  • Reproduction through rational cost-benefit
    analysis of actors
  • Functional feedback cycle
  • Reproduction because the institution serves a
    function for the overall system
  • Power feedback cycle
  • Reproduction because institution is supported by
    elite group
  • Legitimation feedback cycle
  • Reproduciton because actors believe it is morally
    just or appropriate
  • Difficult to distinguish empiricallly

8
Change (1)
  • Difficulty in explaining change
  • Punctuated equilibrium
  • Ideas play an important role
  • In defining and maintaining institutions (cf.
    sociological model of path dependency)
  • In changing institutions
  • Learning
  • Problems
  • Where do these ideas come from?
  • When do ideas have an impact?

9
Change (2)
  • Understanding change by understanding the
    specific feedback mechanisms
  • The Mahoney typology
  • Utilitarian feedback cycle
  • Change due to
  • Competitive pressures
  • Learning
  • Functional feedback cycle
  • Change due to
  • Exogeneous shock that transforms system needs
  • Power feedback cycle
  • Change due to
  • Weakening of elites
  • Strengthening of subordinate groups
  • Legitimation feedback cycle
  • Change due to
  • Value change

10
Change (3)
  • An example of another typology (cf. Thelen)
  • Patronage-based vs. programmatic parties
  • Italys Christian democrat party collapsed when
    it was out of power (breakdown of the positive
    feedback cycle of a patronage-based party)
  • Swedens Social democrats no collapse (no
    breakdown of the positive feedback cycle of a
    programmatic party)
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