Abstract

TEE STUDY OF NEW NATIONS began to take its present form a little over a decade ago in a particularly fortunate intellectual climate. It was a time when new patterns of social science thought in anthropology and sociology were beginning to have an effect on political studies due in large part, to World War II.1 This impact, while it generated antagonism within the field of political science itself, also allowed considerable analytical experimentation, particularly in those cultural and regional areas where little previous work had been done. Although political science orthodoxy reigned supreme in

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