Comperative politicsPlease answer two of the following questions. 4 pages each and 1.5 or double spaced. Additional pages will not be read. Citation must be provided for every source you use, including chapters and articles from this course, using the MLA style. References should be listed on a separate page at the end.
How to use the MLA citation style: https://www.library.cornell.edu/research/citation/mla)How to check your grammar: you may go to the writing center in Kiely Hall to get help from a writing tutor; you may have a peer check for you; you may also try online tools, https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-best-free-spell-style-and-grammar-checker-for-English and
http://www.toptenreviews.com/services/education/best-online-grammar-checker/1. Edward Luce writes of the ?new class warfare? in America (Week 3) and Henry Olsen compares today?s angry working class voters to medieval peasantry (Week 2). Based on Barrington Moore?s discussion of the British case, what are the parallels? You may consider some or all of the following (1) their socio-economic status, (2) victimization by the upper class and by global capitalism, (3) opportunities or a lack thereof for revolution, (4) interplay of class and racial politics and (5) their positive or negative impact on the development of democracy in the two different periods. You should use Moore?s chapter and three other readings (either articles or chapters) from Weeks 2-3.2. In the readings for the week on ?Political Culture in the First World,? what is Professors Inglehart and Flanagan arguing about? What is the contemporary relevance of their debate? You should use four readings from Week 4 and 3.
Comperative politics
August 8th, 2017 admin