Conceptualizing Continuity and Change

Political scientists studying institutional development face the challenge of accounting for both continuity and change over time. Models of path dependence based on increasing returns, inspired by the example of the QWERTY typewriter keyboard, have played an important role in the analysis of institutional continuity, but they have been criticized for their inability to accommodate change. In this article I present an alternative model of path dependence inspired by the example of the Internet, a technology that has changed fundamentally since its invention. The composite-standard model of path dependence illustrates how complex political institutions subject to increasing returns can evolve gradually over time through a changing mix of lower-level component parts. By incorporating mechanisms of institutional change, such as conversion and layering, within an increasing returnsbased theoretical framework, the composite-standard model highlights new interconnections among these previously distinct processes and offers new insights into the nature of long-term political change.

[1]  O. Williamson,et al.  The mechanisms of governance , 1996 .

[2]  Shanthi Kalathil,et al.  Open Networks, Closed Regimes: The Impact of the Internet on Authoritarian Rule , 2003, First Monday.

[3]  Yu. M. Ermol’ev,et al.  A generalized URN problem and its applications , 1983 .

[4]  Taylor C. Boas 17 WEAVING THE AUTHORITARIAN WEB The Control of Internet Use in Nondemocratic Regimes , 2006, How Revolutionary Was the Digital Revolution?.

[5]  Holland Hunter,et al.  Economic Backwardness in Historical Perspective , 1963 .

[6]  Erwin A. Blackstone,et al.  Winners, Losers, and Microsoft: Competition and Antitrust in High Technology Stan J. Liebowitz and Stephen E. Margolis, 1999, pp. 288 , 2002 .

[7]  A. Stinchcombe Constructing Social Theories , 1970 .

[8]  Barrington. Moore,et al.  Social Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy: Lord and Peasant in the Making of the Modern World , 1967 .

[9]  Kathleen Thelen,et al.  Comparative Historical Analysis in the Social Sciences: HOW INSTITUTIONS EVOLVE , 2003 .

[10]  Stan J. Liebowitz,et al.  The Fable of the Keys , 1990, The Journal of Law and Economics.

[11]  Mark A. Lemley,et al.  Legal Implications of Network Economic Effects , 1998 .

[12]  E. Schickler Disjointed Pluralism: Institutional Innovation and the Development of the U.S. Congress , 2001 .

[13]  J. Mahoney Path dependence in historical sociology , 2000 .

[14]  J. Gusfield,et al.  Social Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy: Lord and Peasant in the Making of the Modern World , 1967 .

[15]  Henry E. Brady,et al.  Critiques, Responses, and Trade-Offs: Drawing Together the Debate , 2004 .

[16]  Stephen S. Cohen,et al.  Access and innovation policy for the third-generation internet , 2000 .

[17]  P. Pierson Increasing Returns, Path Dependence, and the Study of Politics , 2000, American Political Science Review.

[18]  W. Arthur,et al.  Increasing Returns and Path Dependence in the Economy , 1996 .

[19]  K. Thelen How Institutions Evolve: Contents , 2004 .

[20]  Paul A. David,et al.  Economic policy and technological performance: Some new standards for the economics of standardization in the information age , 1987 .

[21]  Shanthi Kalathil,et al.  Open Networks, Closed Regimes: The Impact of the Internet on Authoritarian Rule , 2003 .

[22]  D. North Competing Technologies , Increasing Returns , and Lock-In by Historical Events , 1994 .

[23]  A. Przeworski,et al.  The logic of comparative social inquiry , 1970 .

[24]  Ira Katznelson,et al.  Political science : the state of the discipline , 2002 .

[25]  Jerome H. Saltzer,et al.  End-to-end arguments in system design , 1984, TOCS.

[26]  David Collier,et al.  Shaping the Political Arena: Critical Junctures, the Labor Movement, and Regime Dynamics in Latin America. , 1993 .

[27]  Brad T. Gomez Disjointed Pluralism: Institutional Innovation and the Development of the U.S. Congress. By Eric Schickler. (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2001. Pp. 356. $65.00 cloth, $22.95 paper.) , 2003 .

[28]  Paul Pierson,et al.  Historical Institutionalism in Contemporary Political Science , 2002 .

[29]  J. Hacker Privatizing Risk without Privatizing the Welfare State: The Hidden Politics of Social Policy Retrenchment in the United States , 2004, American Political Science Review.

[30]  S. Liebowitz,et al.  Path Dependence, Lock-In, and History , 1995 .

[31]  M. Deutsch Party Systems and Voter Alignments: Cross-National Perspectives. , 1968 .

[32]  Anat Hovav,et al.  Global Diffusion of the Internet V - The Changing Dynamic of the Internet: Early and Late Adopters of the IPv6 Standard , 2005, Commun. Assoc. Inf. Syst..

[33]  Daron Acemoglu,et al.  Economic Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy: Our Argument , 2005 .

[34]  P. David The Evolving Accidental Information Super‐Highway , 2001 .

[35]  P. Pierson Politics in Time: History, Institutions, and Social Analysis , 2004 .

[36]  John Modell,et al.  The Comparative Method: Moving Beyond Qualitative and Quantitative Strategies. By Charles C. Ragin (Berkeley, Los Angeles, and London: University of California Press, 1987. Paperback printing, 1989. xvii plus 185 pp.) , 1992 .

[37]  G. Alexander Institutions, Path Dependence, and Democratic Consolidation , 2001 .

[38]  William N. Parker,et al.  Economic history and the modern economist , 1988 .

[39]  S. Lipset,et al.  Party systems and voter alignments : cross-national perspectives : [Contributors: Robert R. Alford and others] , 1969 .

[40]  P. David At last, a remedy for chronic QWERTY-skepticism! , 1999 .

[41]  Herman Schwartz,et al.  Down the Wrong Path : Path Dependence , Increasing Returns , and Historical , 2004 .

[42]  Colin Crouch,et al.  Breaking the Path of Institutional Development? Alternatives to the New Determinism , 2004 .

[43]  P. David Clio and the Economics of QWERTY , 1985 .

[44]  C. Didier,et al.  Winners, Losers and Microsoft. Competition and Antitrust in High Technology - Stan J. Liebowitz & Stephen E. Margolis , 2000 .

[45]  James Mahoney,et al.  Comparative Historical Analysis in the Social Sciences , 2004, Perspectives on Politics.

[46]  D. Finegold How Institutions Evolve: The Political Economy of Skills in Germany, Britain, the United States, and Japan , 2005, Perspectives on Politics.