Far from reflecting sudden whims broader intellectual movements usually respond to felt social needs or provocations. This is certainly true of comparative political reflection which in accademia today is called comparative political theory. At the time of its inception (some 25 years ago) the enterprise responded mainly to two stimuli or factors. The first factor was the Cold War the interminable struggle for domination among world powers and lesser national agents. The felt need in this case was the desire for some kind of cosmopolitanism for a more attentive and equitable treatment of different countries and cultures. The second factor was the progressive weakening or erosion of the modern paradigm of stable selfhood or identity an erosion due to the impact of such emerging perspectives as phenomenology deconstruction and post-modernism. The turn to comparison here signaled the opening of the self to growing interactions with the non-self or other. This dual simulation has not subsided. In particular the second provocation has acquired a new and unexpected relevance in our time.
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