It's referred to as "the second enclosure movement." The first being the invention of private fenced property in England and Europe
It's referred to as "the second enclosure movement." The first being the invention of private fenced property in England and Europe
Okay cool, so an interesting way to apply political philosophy in a big 40 page paper is to compare governments on the basis of their foundational philosophy. For the United States, you have Montesquieu and Locke, for socialist countries, you have Marx and Engles.
Comparing what Montesquieu/Locke and what Marx/Engles thought about 3 to 5 different things (individualism vs collectivism, free markets vs planned economies, republics vs bottom up democracy) and applying that to how the countries operate can yield a lot of content and great analysis.
Another approach could be evaluating the evolution of marxist thought throughout the 20th century, focusing thought leaders like Lenin, Mao, and Fanon and exploring the effects of their ideas through the revolutions they inspired or led.
What is your favorite subfield in political science? Do you like to write/learn about domestic political structures and institutions, international comparative policy analysis, political philosophy, or international relations? From there I can help you whittle down a topic
My bad Carl I didn't realize the login requirement. Watch it here on tik tok https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMJomE5fo/
Shit works can confirm