Chapter 1 Foreword Chapter 2 Preface Chapter 3 Two Different Approaches to the Design of Public Order Chapter 4 Chapter 1. Introduction: Seeking to Understand Principles of Governance Part 5 Part I. A Political Theory of a Compound Republic Chapter 6 Chapter 2. Point of Departure, Basic Assumptions, and First Principles Chapter 7 Chapter 3. Constitutional Choice Chapter 8 Chapter 4. Some Rudiments of Political Design Chapter 9 Chapter 5. A Republican Remedy for the Republican Disease Chapter 10 Chapter 6. Federal Structures and Their Implications Chapter 11 Chapter 7. The Distribution of Authority in the Organization of the National Government Part 12 Part II. More Than Two Centuries Later: Reflections on the American Experiments in Constitutional Choice Chapter 13 Chapter 8. Constitutional Choice and Constitutional Development Chapter 14 Chapter 9. The Twentieth-Century Break withThe Federalist Tradition Chapter 15 Chapter 10. The Constitutional Level of Analysis: A Challenge
Vincent Ostrom is Arthur F. Bentley Professor Emeritus of Political Science and founding director of the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis at Indiana University, Bloomington. Barbara Allen is professor, former chair of the Department of Political Science, and former Director of Women's Studies at Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota.
Vincent Ostrom is well known as a profound and philosophical
student of American government. This revised version of his basic
book will be welcomed by almost everyone. People who are already
familiar with his work and people who are not, but who should be
will learn a good deal from reading this improved version. Not only
will they learn, but they will probably enjoy it. It is not only
profound but also very well written.
*Gordon Tullock, George Mason University*
Those who teach and write about the founding of the United State
have generally come to regard the Federalist Papers as the best
commentary for understanding the meaning and intent underlying the
U.S. Constitution. I suspect that, over time, many of those same
people will come to regard Vincent Ostrom's The Political Theory of
a Compound Republic as the best guide for understanding the
coherent theory that underlies and ties together the Federalist
Papers. It is already one of the four of five indispensible works
in publc choice theory along with such works as James Buchanan and
Gordon Tullock's The Calculus of Consent. This new revision by
Ostrom and Allen will also, I predict, become a classic in public
choice theory.
*Donald S. Lutz, University of Houston*
This update of a classic exposition of the Federalist and its
contemporary relevance is a welcome relief from narrow notions of
administrative federalism and hierarchical intergovernmental
relations.Vincent Ostrom is a preeminent champion of multiple
centers of power and overlapping jurisdictions as constituting key
elements of a republic of liberty and constitutional choice for
democratic citizens.
*John Kincaid, Lafayette College*
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