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The French Experience of Modernization
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 July 2011
Extract
Few theorists today admit to a belief in the “idea of progress.” But, if the literature in comparative politics in the past several years is any guide, virtually all political scientists now believe in the concept of “modernization.” Modernization theory is being invoked to compare traditional and modern societies, to analyze the evolution of individual political systems, and to appraise the effectiveness of political institutions in one or several political systems. All of the problems and subjects of political science are now being reexamined in terms of some concept of modernization.
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References
1 The Theory of the Leisure Class (1899). Veblen's essay on the “discipline of the machine,” in The Theory of Business Enterprise (1904) is an excellent statement of the influence of technology upon social and political values. One major exception to the general view that the above defined factors are correlated in any social system is Moore, Wilbert S., Social Change (Englewood Cliffs, N.J. 1963)Google Scholar, in which the looseness of social structure is stressed.
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