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James A. Caporaso

James A. Caporaso

· Professor Emeritus

University of Washington · Political Science

Active 1968–2024

h-index38
Citations6.9k
Papers24725 last 5y
Funding
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Research topics

  • Social Science
  • Political Science
  • Sociology
  • Computer Science
  • Epistemology
  • Economics
  • Positive economics
  • Law
  • Geography

Selected publications

  • Introduction

    Cambridge University Press eBooks · 2022 · 3 citations

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Sociology
    • Political Science
    • Social Science

    The human condition teems with institutions, yet scholarly attention ebbs and flows, and scientific progress proceeds unevenly. After almost half a century of “new institutionalisms,” the time has come to take stock of the vast literature, and to identify existing strengths and new opportunities. Building on dozens of conceptions of institutions from across the social sciences, Theories of Institutions defines them as “intertemporal social arrangements that shape human relations in support of particular values.” By definition, institutions endure and institutions are intersubjective. But they are also consequential, impacting aggregate human welfare and very often shaping distributional outcomes. Setting up key concepts of temporality, sociality, (in)efficiency, and power, on which the heart of the book focuses, the Introduction also articulates a set of common questions around institutional origins, maintenance, and change to be addressed throughout. Such analysis promises to shed new light on the dual nature of institutions as human constructs and human constraints, and to identify promising avenues for interdisciplinary dialogue.

  • Theories of Institutions

    2022 · 27 citations

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Sociology
    • Social Science
    • Political Science

    The human condition teems with institutions – intertemporal social arrangements that shape human relations in support of particular values – and the social scientific work developed over the last five decades aimed at understanding them is similarly vast and diverse. This book synthesizes scholarship from across the social sciences, with special focus on political science, sociology, economics, and organizational studies. Drawing out institutions' essentially social and temporal qualities and their varying relationships to efficiency and power, the authors identify more underlying similarity in understandings of institutional origins, maintenance, and change than emerges from overviews from within any given disciplinary tradition. Most importantly, Theories of Institutions identifies dozens of avenues for cross-fertilization, the pursuit of which can help keep this broad and inherently diverse field of study vibrant for future generations of scholars.

Frequent coauthors

  • Peter Gourevitch

    354 shared
  • Stephen D. Krasner

    Stanford University

    334 shared
  • Harold K. Jacobson

    329 shared
  • Ernst B. Haas

    329 shared
  • Janice Gross Stein

    University of Toronto

    313 shared
  • John Odell

    313 shared
  • Peter J. Katzenstein

    Cornell University

    284 shared
  • Takashi Inoguchi

    Shibuya (Japan)

    281 shared

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