The Logic of Political Survival
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The Logic of Political Survival
Summary
The Logic of Political Survival is a non-fiction work[1]. It draws 13 Wikipedia views per month (non_fiction_work category, ranking #25 of 48).[2]
Key Facts
- The Logic of Political Survival authored Bruce Bueno de Mesquita[3].
- The Logic of Political Survival authored Alastair Smith[4].
- The Logic of Political Survival authored James D. Morrow[5].
- The Logic of Political Survival's instance of is recorded as non-fiction work[6].
- The Logic of Political Survival's publisher is recorded as The MIT Press[7].
- The Logic of Political Survival's language of work or name is recorded as English[8].
- The Logic of Political Survival's publication date is recorded as +2003-00-00T00:00:00Z[9].
- The Logic of Political Survival's Open Library ID is recorded as OL13753885W[10].
- The Logic of Political Survival's main subject is recorded as Selectorate theory[11].
- The Logic of Political Survival's LibraryThing work ID is recorded as 975449[12].
- The Logic of Political Survival's title is recorded as The Logic of Political Survival[13].
- The Logic of Political Survival's author name string is recorded as Randolph M. Siverson[14].
- The Logic of Political Survival's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/11h53m_zng[15].
Body
Works and Contributions
Authored works include Bruce Bueno de Mesquita[3], a political scientist[16], b. 1946[17], of United States[18], awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship[19], specialised in international relations[20]; Alastair Smith[4], a political scientist[21], b. 1967[22], awarded the Karl Deutsch Award[23]; and James D. Morrow[5], a political scientist[24], b. 1957[25], of United States[26], awarded the Karl Deutsch Award[27], specialised in political science[28].
Why It Matters
The Logic of Political Survival draws 13 Wikipedia views per month (non_fiction_work category, ranking #25 of 48).[2]