Dimensions of Political Systems: Factor Analysis ofA Cross-Polity Survey
- 2 September 1965
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 59 (3), 602-614
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1953171
Abstract
Since the publication of David Easton'sThe Political System, it has become increasingly common for political scientists to speculate as to the basic factors which may be common to all political systems and which, in their varying manifestations, determine the unique styles of political behavior within each. Efforts to identify the basic political phenomena and their complex relationships have generated a variety of cross-national conceptual schemes and propositions. Some authors speak of structural and functional requisites, some refer to equilibrium conditions for system maintenance. Others, employing more traditional concepts, refer to power, legitimacy, ideology, instability, consensus, influence, and bargaining. Regardless of the form these efforts assume, they all posit the existence of factors or dimensions which are common to all political systems.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Cross-Polity SurveyCanadian Journal of Economics and Political Science, 1965
- The Civic CulturePublished by Walter de Gruyter GmbH ,1963
- IranPublished by University of California Press ,1962
- The Statistical Measurement of Urbanization and Economic DevelopmentLand Economics, 1961
- Essays on Geography and Economic DevelopmentThe Geographical Journal, 1961
- The varimax criterion for analytic rotation in factor analysisPsychometrika, 1958
- Applicability of Factor Analysis in the Behavioral Sciences: A Methodological StudyThe American Journal of Psychology, 1958
- Biquartimin Criterion for Rotation to Oblique Simple Structure in Factor AnalysisScience, 1957
- A Preface to Democratic TheoryThe Western Political Quarterly, 1957
- The dimensions of culture patterns by factorization of national characters.The Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 1949