Volume 1 • Issue 1 • 1000e103
J Political Sciences & Public Affairs
ISSN: 2332-0761 JPSPA, an open access journal
Editorial Open Access
Chakravarty, J Political Sciences & Public Affairs 2013, 1:1
DOI: 10.4172/2332-0761.1000e103
Political Science and the “Micro-Politics” Research Agenda
Anuradha Chakravarty*
Department of Political Science, University of South Carolina, USA
In the last decade, a new research agenda has emerged in political
science. Under the broad rubric of “micro-politics” research, these
studies focused on the close range analysis of a gamut of questions
such as rebel group behavior, popular enactment of genocidal violence,
reconciliatory or peace-making behaviors, and democratic citizenship
[1-4]. Combining various methodological strategies, these studies
refocused attention on the non-elites (the “little people”) as the central
object of inquiry. Local level dynamics-local histories, institutions,
power struggles, and community-based networks-played an important
role in these explanatory frameworks. is Editorial note sketches
a broad overview of this agenda not only because it has attracted
prominent scholars and enjoyed rapid growth within the discipline,
but also because it holds substantial promise for the future of political
science.
As a discipline, political science has typically emphasized “high
politics” centering on formal institutions and macro-structures, such
as legislative and judicial politics, civil-military relations, or political
parties at the national or regional levels, and other routinized formal
kinds of activities, eg. Voting behaviors, NGO activities etc., the
problem was three-fold: First, the mainstream understanding was that
policy making flowed from national/regional elites; thus, research on
questions of war and peace, development and underdevelopment were
to be analyzed at elite level. Second, there was a lack of well developed
analytical frameworks to study informal institutions such as practices
of reciprocity or the invisible “infra-politics” of subordinate groups,
within which to anchor theories that linked local informal processes
and practices to local behaviors and ultimately, to state-level outcomes.
Jim Scott’s work on the “weapons of the weak” was an important
early political science study that conceived individual level informal
behaviors as political acts with political consequences [5]. Finally, the
substantial physical, monetary, time costs and field work skills required
for conducting in-depth micro-level research emerged as formidable
challenges to actually carrying out this kind of research.
Nonetheless, a slew of “micro-politics” studies emerged in the
last decade that added significant value to existing political science
scholarship. Scholars argued that the success or failure of national
policies was evidenced in how they were executed at local level. us,
Fujii [6] demonstrated how the national level genocide “script” in
Rwanda was implemented variously at the local level based on local
interpretations of orders flowing from the top (2009). Scholars also
advanced this research agenda by demonstrating that local dynamics
were not simply products of, but actually consequential for state-level
outcomes. Kerkvliet’s work showed how thousands of individual
actions at the local level unraveled national policy on collective
farms in socialist Vietnam (2005) and Austessere’s work showed how
interwoven local level conflicts are the source of intractable regional
instability in the Democratic Republic of Congo (2010) [7,8].
New advances in political science theory, such as the “new
institutionalisms” [9], and “informal institutions” [10] opened up
analytical space to study the impact of historical legacies, social
processes and practices on political outcomes. A further impetus to
“micro-politics” research came by way of methodologically innovative
thinking in the late 1990s, reflected in the self-conscious resurgence
of the qualitative and multi-methods movement within political
science. Since “micro-politics” research tends to locate itself at a single
or limited number of local sites, the researcher had to guard against
tying theoretical frameworks too closely to local, site-based specificities
that would impede the ability to make more general claims about the
phenomenon of interest that could be valid across mid-range scope
conditions. Debates about the self-conscious selection of cases, on
developing comparative designs and sound theory-driven process
tracing methods etc. generated clarity on the utility of “micro-politics”
research designs and methodology for broader questions of theory
building and hypothesis evaluation [11,12]. e growing utility of mixed
methods that combined different logics of social scientific inquiry, such
as using field experiments along with qualitative methods, quantitative
surveys etc. enabled more rigorous empirical evaluation of theories.
Political science scholars were also able to leverage the growing
emphasis on inter-disciplinary research that has swept academia in the
last decade or so. A tradition of “micro-politics” research was already
well established in disciplines such as sociology and anthropology
[13,14] in which findings from a limited number of field sites were
used to reflect upon larger structures of power and domination.
Political scientists have generally privileged general insights over
local knowledge; they now referred to methodological debates in
other disciplines, and borrowed self-consciously from literatures in
other fields (for instance, social networks, and social psychology).
As with colleagues in other disciplines who conducted field work,
political scientists also mulled over larger questions about the ethics
of field research. Since researchers were interacting closely with local
populations, oſten in conflict zones, or post-war socially divided and
repressive contexts, it became imperative to confront issues pertaining
to full disclosure in field relationships, obtaining informed consent,
and securing the safety of respondents etc. [15]. For political scientists
across the board, not just those conducting “micro-politics” work,
conforming to the ethics requirements of institutional review boards
has become the established norm.
Looking around at the world today, the sweeping popularity
growing involvement of local level actors in civil wars and internal
conflicts (Rwanda, Democratic Republic of Congo), the reintegration
of demobilized rebels into their communities (northern Uganda), the
ability of local actors for regulation and dispute resolution even in
the context of state failure (Somaliland) have opened up fascinating
new questions about micro-dynamics, and the macro-level impacts of
those micro-level dynamics. Armed with new analytical frameworks,
Received January 27, 2013; Accepted January 29, 2013; Published February
02, 2013
Citation: Chakravarty A (2013) Political Science and the “Micro-Politics” Research
Agenda. J Political Sciences & Public Affairs 1: e103. doi:10.4172/2332-0761.1000e103
Copyright: © 2013 Chakravarty A. This is an open-access article distributed under
the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted
use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and
source are credited.
of local level innovations such as micro-finance (Bangladesh), the
*Corresponding author: Anuradha Chakravarty, Assistant Professor, Department
of Political Science, University of South Carolina, Columbia, USA, Tel: 803-777-
2207; Fax: 803-777-8255; E-mail: chakrava@mailbox.sc.edu
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ISSN: 2332-0761