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Rule-Making Rules
An Analytical Framework for Political Institutions
Introduction
Stefano Bartolini argues that, despite the growth of a large theoretical literature about institutions and institutionalism over the last thirty years, the specific nature of political institutions has been relatively neglected. Political institutions have been subsumed into the broader problems of the emergence, persistence, change and functions of all types of institutions.
Definition of Political Institutions
The author defines political institutions strictly as norms and rules of conferral, to be distinguished from norms/rules of conduct and of recognition. They are those norms and rules that empower rulers, set limits to the capacity to ensure behavioural compliance, and define the proper means for achieving such compliance.
Implications and Audience
This book draws logical and empirical consequences from this understanding, to distinguish different types of norms/rules, and to specify the peculiarities of those norms/rules that are political. The book will appeal to researchers of political institutions in comparative politics, and in political science and political sociology more broadly.