It's tough to keep students afloat in a sea of detail when moving from country to country in a comparative course. While it's important to give students a sense of place, lengthy textbooks can overwhelm them with far too much description. Students are left with no clear path for understanding regional context or for making meaningful cross-national comparisons, and little sense of larger concepts and themes.
The Politics of Governing: A Comparative Introduction answers this dilemma in a truly brief text--only 320 pages long--that frames country case studies within regional chapters. This approach equips students to see the bigger picture and understand how the issues of governing can no longer be separated from events outside a country's borders. The authors answer the same set of questions in each chapter--What are the purposes of government (the ends of politics)? What do governments do (the functions of politics)? Who exercises political power (the processes of politics)?--giving this concise text strong analysis of particular countries within a powerful regional framework.
The book incorporates the American experience as a familiar touch point for students and examines those areas of the world in which the U.S. is most engaged: