Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-8bhkd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-08T05:34:41.981Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A Unified Canon? Latin American Graduate Training in Comparative Politics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 November 2024

Nicolás Taccone*
Affiliation:
Nicolás Taccone is a PhD candidate in political science, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA
Inés Fynn
Affiliation:
Inés Fynn is an assistant professor at the Universidad Católica del Uruguay, Montevideo, Uruguay
Ignacio Borba
Affiliation:
Ignacio Borba is a PhD student in political science at the University of Illinois at Chicago
*
Corresponding author: Nicolás Taccone; Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

In Latin American comparative politics, a tension exists between North Americanization and parochialism. While certain academic scholarship is published in Scopus-indexed journals that engage with “mainstream” Global North literature, other works are found in non-indexed outlets, focusing solely on their home countries and fostering parochial scientific communities. To assess this tension in graduate program curricula, we compiled an original dataset of comparative politics readings from 21 universities across nine Latin American countries. Our network analysis reveals a centralized structure influenced by mainstream readings, challenging the expectation of parochialism. In addition to the mainstream content, universities tend to incorporate readings from regional journals to facilitate cross-case comparisons. However, these materials are inconsistently shared, resulting in fragmentation of content from Latin American sources. Our findings contribute to and challenge the North Americanization versus parochialism debate, showing that future scholars receive similar mainstream training but encounter diverse regional materials during their PhD studies.

Type
Critical Debates
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of University of Miami

Introduction

Political Science (PS) in Latin America has experienced significant institutional growth since the second half of the twentieth century. The growth has manifested as the expansion of graduate and undergraduate programs, increased research funding availability, the establishment of national and regional political science associations, and growing academic publications and influence by local scholars. Within the subfield of comparative politics (CP), particularly concerning academic production, a heated debate has emerged between two contrasting tendencies: North Americanization vs. parochialism. While some Latin American scholars actively seek to publish and engage with mainstream literature from the Global North, others primarily concentrate their research on their home countries (Tanaka Reference Tanaka2017; Freidenberg Reference Freidenberg2017; Codato et al. Reference Codato, Madeira and Bittencourt2020; Lucca Reference Lucca2021). Footnote 1

Scholarship on PS’s institutionalization in the region has predominantly concentrated on case study research, examining countries such as Brazil, Argentina, El Salvador, Chile, Ecuador, Costa Rica, Uruguay, and Mexico, among others (Amorim and Santos Reference Amorim Neto and Santos2015; Calvo et al. Reference Calvo, Elverdín, Kessler and Victoria Murillo2019; Artiga-González Reference Artiga-González2006; Fuentes and Santana Reference Fuentes and Santana2005; Heiss Reference Heiss2015; Mejía Acosta et al. Reference Mejía Acosta, Freidenberg and Pachano2005; Alfaro Redondo and Cullel Reference Alfaro Redondo and Cullell2005; Barrientos del Monte Reference Barrientos Del Monte2015; Buquet Reference Buquet2012). Footnote 2 Notably, this scholarship often lacks a systematic comparative component, making it difficult to draw generalizable conclusions about the institutionalization process mentioned above. Furthermore, these studies have yet to explore a previously overlooked dimension of institutionalization: doctoral students’ training in comparative politics within Latin American universities.

The CP subfield in Latin America holds significant importance, making notable contributions to mainstream Global North political science literature (Munck Reference Munck2007). Most Latin American political scientists specialize in comparative politics (Freidenberg and Malamud Reference Freidenberg and Malamud2017). Since the 1990s, numerous young political scientists from Latin America have pursued academic training in the United States (Freidenberg and Malamud Reference Freidenberg and Malamud2013; Bulcourf and Cardozo Reference Bulcourf and Cardozo2017). However, with the growth of the discipline and graduate programs in the region, many students are opting for local training in Latin America in addition to those studying abroad. These changes in the region’s institutional educational landscape raise important questions about the nature of CP training received by graduate students. Do future Latin American comparative politics scholars receive similar training? Is there a single canon for instructing CP in the region?

To investigate PhD students’ training systematically, we built an original dataset of the comparative politics readings Footnote 3 that they encounter in 21 universities across nine Latin American countries. These universities offer courses in comparative politics within their political science doctoral programs. In total, our dataset comprises 1886 individual readings—our unit of analysis is a reading. This dataset facilitated a network analysis to determine the existence of a unified canon for teaching CP in Latin American doctoral programs. Additionally, we employed descriptive statistics to gain deeper insights into various reading characteristics (including reading type, outlet, methodology, language, and authors’ gender and region of origin), shedding light on the nature of the canon being imparted in these programs.

Among various reading characteristics, we devoted special attention to the type of readings to assess the presence of the tension between North Americanization and parochialism within PhD-level CP materials. Mainstream readings are those published in Scopus-indexed outlets. Footnote 4 Scopus-indexed publications undergo rigorous peer review and must engage with substantive comparative literature. They employ widely accepted theoretical and methodological frameworks within the discipline to contribute to academic knowledge. Therefore, regardless of whether these readings examine one or multiple cases, we classify them as mainstream. Typical examples include articles from prestigious US-based journals like the American Political Science Review or Comparative Political Studies, as well as publications from leading European book publishers such as Oxford or Cambridge University Press. Footnote 5

In contrast, parochial readings focus exclusively on their respective Latin American universities’ home countries. We categorized readings as parochial if they were not published in Scopus-indexed sources and solely concentrated on the country where the university is located.

Not all readings neatly fit into the categories of mainstream or parochial, though. We have identified a distinct third category, which we conceptualize as regional readings. Unlike mainstream materials, these readings do not engage in explicit dialogue with the established Global North literature and, as a result, are not indexed in Scopus database outlets. However, unlike parochial materials, regional readings extend beyond a university’s home country. Instead, they involve cross-case comparisons to contribute to academic knowledge within the discipline. Books or chapters published by the Fondo de Cultura Económica in Mexico or the Instituto de Estudios Peruanos in Peru, along with articles in Argentine journals like Revista POSTData or Desarrollo Económico, are frequently used as regional sources.

Our findings challenge the conventional dichotomy of North Americanization versus parochialism underscored by previous scholarship, offering a more nuanced interpretation within the context of doctoral curricula in CP. Across the region’s graduate programs, we have identified a reasonably unified canon for the teaching of comparative politics. While acknowledging some curriculum variations among universities, our analysis reveals a predominantly centralized network structure. This centralization can be attributed to the widespread inclusion of mainstream CP readings, primarily originating from the Global North, and shared by most universities.

Contrary to expectations set by existing literature, universities almost entirely exclude parochial materials from their curricula. Instead, they favor the inclusion of regional readings that embrace a comparative approach, often sourced from Latin American journals. This finding challenges the ongoing debate regarding the tension between parochialism and North Americanization, which fails to recognize the presence of regional readings. However, these readings are not consistently shared among universities. Consequently, unlike mainstream content, doctoral students in Latin America are not consistently exposed to similar regional materials. While most PhD students in Latin America engage with mainstream CP works by scholars like Gary W. Cox and Adam Przeworski, they typically do not consume similar materials originating from the region.

The article is organized as follows. Section two provides an overview of political science’s institutionalization in Latin America, focusing on comparative politics and the North Americanization versus parochialism debate. Section three details our data collection process and methods for investigating the presence of a unified canon for teaching comparative politics in the region. Section four presents our network analysis results, followed by section five, which offers descriptive statistics for a deeper understanding of the network. The last section summarizes the main findings, discusses their implications, and suggests future research directions.

Comparative Politics Institutionalization in Latin America: Between Autonomy and Northern Influence

From its origins in the mid-twentieth century to the present day, political science in Latin America has undergone a process of institutionalization, gradually consolidating as an independent field of study. This process, which entails the discipline’s transition from a vocation to a profession (Bejarano Reference Bejarano2015; Tanaka Reference Tanaka2017), has been studied through different dimensions, such as academic offerings at the undergraduate and graduate levels, regional journals’ publication impact, and the development of scientific and professional networks, among others (Durán-Martínez et al. Reference Durán-Martínez, Sierra and Snyder2023; D’Alessandro Reference D’Alessandro2013; Bulcourf Reference Bulcourf2012; Altman Reference Altman2012; Bulcourf and Cardozo Reference Bulcourf and Cardozo2017).

Historically, the development of PS in Latin America has had a solid link to democratization processes (Barrientos del Monte Reference Barrientos Del Monte2013; Ravecca Reference Ravecca2019). During the 1970s, the discipline experienced a “golden age,” cut short by the re-emergence of authoritarian regimes (Altman Reference Altman2006). However, with the return of democracy in the 1980s–1990s, PS’s institutionalization resumed its trajectory in the region. This resurgence was driven by scholars’ interest in understanding democratic transitions and changes in the international context following the end of the Cold War (Barrientos del Monte Reference Barrientos Del Monte2013). For instance, prior to democracy’s “third wave” (Huntington Reference Huntington1991), Latin American students interested in politics had to study law or sociology due to the lack of academic offerings in PS (Bejarano Reference Bejarano2015; Tanaka Reference Tanaka2017). The relatively recent establishment of undergraduate and graduate programs in universities across the region reflects the increasing trend in institutionalization (Tanaka and Dargent Reference Tanaka and Dargent2015; Altman Reference Altman2012).

While political science’s institutionalization has made significant progress in Latin America, there is still considerable variation among countries in the region. This variation can be attributed to divergent historical contexts and academic politics (Altman Reference Altman2006; Bulcourf and Cardozo Reference Bulcourf and Cardozo2017; Amorim Neto and Santos Reference Amorim Neto and Santos2015). In some countries, the establishment of bachelor’s degree programs in PS is relatively recent; in others, there exists a wide array of master’s and doctoral programs. Footnote 6 The level of institutionalization ranges from countries with well-established national political science associations and universities offering a broad spectrum of degrees and research programs, such as Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Uruguay, and, to a lesser extent, Colombia, Costa Rica, and Venezuela. In contrast, some countries like Bolivia lack these attributes (Varnoux Garay Reference Varnoux Garay2005; Barrientos del Monte Reference Barrientos Del Monte2013; Freidenberg Reference Freidenberg2017).

The growing institutionalization of PS is also evident in the academic production from and about the region. Notably, the subdiscipline of Latin American comparative politics has historically made significant contributions to the Global North’s “mainstream” literature in political science (Munck Reference Munck2007). The institutionalization of PS in Latin America has provided intellectuals with the necessary research infrastructure to “give voice” to a distinctive Latin American perspective when examining political phenomena. Guillermo O’Donnell’s work (Reference O’Donnell1973, Reference O’Donnell, Schmitter and Whitehead1986, Reference O’Donnell1993, Reference O’Donnell1994) stands out as a prime example of this phenomenon.

Scholars have underscored a tension between two extremes in Latin American comparative politics academic production: North Americanization vs. parochialism (Tanaka Reference Tanaka2017; Lucca Reference Lucca2021). While some Latin American scholarship has significantly influenced (and been influenced by) the Anglo-Saxon “mainstream” literature in PS, not all academic work on the region engages with this body of scholarship (Munck Reference Munck2007; Freidenberg Reference Freidenberg2017). Some Latin American researchers, especially younger scholars who have studied abroad, actively seek publication in US or European academic journals and dialogue with the mainstream literature from the Global North. However, many Latin America-based scholars tend to focus their research on their own countries (Lucca Reference Lucca2021; Chasquetti Reference Chasquetti2010; Rocha Reference Rocha2012), resulting in the formation of parochial scientific communities (Tanaka Reference Tanaka2017; Codato et al. Reference Codato, Madeira and Bittencourt2020). Traditionally, research projects in each country primarily center on national (or sub-national) cases; therefore, comparative political analyses involving multiple Latin American countries remain relatively scarce (Rocha Reference Rocha2012; Chasquetti Reference Chasquetti2017; Basabe-Serrano and Huertas-Hernandez Reference Basabe-Serrano and Huertas-Hernandez2018).

The North Americanization of CP in Latin America is rooted in the origins of the subfield, which has been intrinsically connected to developments in the Global North, particularly in the United States and continental Europe (Munck Reference Munck2007; Calvo et al. Reference Calvo, Elverdín, Kessler and Victoria Murillo2019). Global North scholars have historically influenced the work of Latin American social scientists (Munck and Snyder Reference Munck and Snyder2019). Footnote 7 Driven by both greater financial resources and intellectual curiosity in the study of Latin America than their Western European counterparts, US universities have attracted many young Latin American political scientists since the 1990s who pursued advanced academic training in the United States (Bulcourf and Cardozo Reference Bulcourf and Cardozo2017). Within PS, most of these academics have specialized in comparative politics. While some have opted to build their professional or academic careers in the United States, many have returned to Latin America after completing their PhD studies (Freidenberg and Malamud Reference Freidenberg and Malamud2013). Footnote 8 Upon their return, Latin American comparative politics naturally absorbed some of the themes, methods, and research design strategies predominating in the North (Bulcourf and Cardozo Reference Bulcourf and Cardozo2017). These migration processes have bolstered the transnational networks of scholars, both formal and informal, between the South and the North (Munck and Snyder Reference Munck and Snyder2019). Footnote 9

Nonetheless, Northern influences have not uniformly impacted all scientific communities across Latin America. As articulated by Weyland (Reference Weyland2015, 128), compared to other regions, “there is much less of a clear-cut separation between politics and political science in Latin America.” For example, changes in government or regime transitions can redefine leadership roles within universities, thus affecting their intellectual pursuits and research initiatives (Munck and Snyder Reference Munck and Snyder2019). Consequently, the distinct socio-political contexts in each country have given rise to a fragmented landscape within the field of PS, characterized by varying levels of institutionalization and diverse research agendas (Barrientos del Monte Reference Barrientos Del Monte2013). A clear manifestation of this fragmentation is a parochialism of academic production, whereby research programs predominantly confine their focus to domestic cases (Codato et al. Reference Codato, Madeira and Bittencourt2020).

In sum, while part of Latin American CP directly converses with the Global North scholarship to analyze political phenomena, other research programs focus primarily on their respective home countries. This dichotomy has resulted in a noticeable tension often referred to as “North Americanization versus parochialism” (Tanaka Reference Tanaka2017; Freidenberg Reference Freidenberg2017; Codato et al. Reference Codato, Madeira and Bittencourt2020; Lucca Reference Lucca2021). Given the active involvement of Latin American-based scholars in training graduate students in the region, this article explores whether this tension is mirrored in the curricula of PhD programs.

Data and Methods

To investigate the training of doctoral students, we constructed an original dataset encompassing the assigned readings in CP at 21 universities across nine Latin American countries. This dataset facilitated a network analysis, revealing the connections between universities based on their assigned readings. Our dataset includes various dimensions of these readings, such as author information (region of origin and gender) and reading details (type, outlet, method, and language), all of which we utilize to characterize the resultant network. In total, we collected data for 1886 readings, with each reading serving as our unit of analysis.

We conducted an extensive online search to identify universities potentially offering a PhD program in PS. Subsequently, we emailed these universities to gather the necessary information for constructing our dataset. Footnote 10 Specifically, we contacted the political science departments Footnote 11 —reaching out to doctoral program directors and coordinators—and requested the reading list for the comprehensive exam in comparative politics. Footnote 12 When that exam was not part of the doctoral program, we asked for syllabi for the core or general seminar on comparative politics. When that type of seminar was not offered either, we asked for syllabi for two or three seminars covering essential topics in comparative politics. In all instances, we requested the most updated version of the materials. Footnote 13

We collected data for 21 universities spanning nine Latin American countries, including six from Argentina, Footnote 14 four from Brazil, Footnote 15 three from Colombia, Footnote 16 two from Chile, Footnote 17 two from Mexico, Footnote 18 one from Uruguay, Footnote 19 one from Peru, Footnote 20 one from Ecuador, Footnote 21 and one from Venezuela Footnote 22 (see Table A.1 in the Appendix for the specific university departments, graduate programs, and consulted materials). Our sample of universities may present certain biases. For example, Argentine universities are overrepresented, while Mexican universities are underrepresented. Moreover, it is plausible that universities with more substantial financial resources were more responsive to our emails, likely due to having more administrative personnel available for public inquiries. Nonetheless, our sample includes both public and private universities from a diverse range of countries, making it sufficiently large and varied to draw generalizable conclusions about the state of comparative politics doctoral education across Latin America. Footnote 23

Based on our novel dataset, we conducted a network analysis to explore the similarities and differences in CP content provided by Latin American universities to their doctoral students. Our primary goal was to assess whether a unified model for training future comparativist scholars exists in Latin America. Graphically, each node represents a university, and connecting lines indicate shared readings between two or more universities. This analysis visually represents each university’s position within the broader network, reflecting the extent of shared readings.

To evaluate whether the tension between North Americanization and parochialism is reflected in PhD program curricula, we categorized assigned readings into three types: mainstream, regional, and parochial. This categorization stems from the intersection of two analytical criteria. First, we determine if the reading is published in a Scopus-indexed outlet. Second, if the reading is not published in a Scopus outlet, we then assess whether it employs a comparative approach. Figure 1 illustrates our approach for categorizing these various types of readings.

Figure 1. Operationalization of Reading Types.

Source: Own elaboration.

We operationalized readings as mainstream if they were published in outlets (journals, books, etc.) indexed in Scopus, a widely recognized database for scholarly research. Scopus-indexed publications undergo rigorous peer review, ensuring a high standard of excellence. Therefore, we consider readings published in Scopus-indexed outlets as mainstream because they are likely to engage with the most relevant theoretical debates in the discipline to meet the criteria of excellence. In essence, regardless of whether these readings examine one or multiple cases, they are inherently in dialogue with the comparative literature on the topic, which we deem sufficient for classification as mainstream. For example, consider a recent book by Pérez Bentancur, Piñeiro, and Rosenblatt (Reference Pérez Bentancur, Piñeiro and Rosenblatt2020) that studies Uruguay’s Frente Amplio. While this book centers on the Uruguayan case, we classified it as mainstream because it was published in a Scopus-listed outlet (Cambridge University Press). Furthermore, it references other cases and directly engages with the comparative scholarship on the topic.

We operationalized readings as regional if they were not published in Scopus-indexed outlets but did employ a comparative approach when studying political phenomena. This categorization highlights a previously overlooked middle ground within the tension discussed in the literature. Although “mainstream” and “parochial” are relevant categories, they do not encompass the whole universe of assigned materials in CP within Latin American universities. The “regional” category helps address this gap by acknowledging materials that take a comparative perspective but do not meet the criteria for mainstream classification.

Finally, we operationalized readings as parochial if they were not published in Scopus-indexed outlets and exclusively focused on the home country of the university. Both conditions are individually necessary and jointly sufficient for classifying a reading as parochial. This rigorous operationalization strategy ensures that all designated parochial readings genuinely exhibit parochial tendencies. While the absence of a Scopus listing initially indicated that these readings may not be in dialogue with other cases through established scholarship, the additional criterion of being case studies about the same country as the assigning university confirms their parochial nature.

Latin American Graduate Training in Comparative Politics: A Unified Canon?

Figure 2 presents our network analysis’ results, with nodes representing universities and lines indicating shared readings. Footnote 24 The analysis reveals a reasonably centralized structure (Borgatti et al. Reference Borgatti, Ajay Mehra and Labianca2009), suggesting a well-defined center formed by PUCP, CIDE, and PUC, around which the rest of the universities tend to converge—except for the UExternado, which stands apart. A subgroup of universities (UFRP, UTDT, UDP, UCA, and UniAndes) is positioned closer to the center of the network. The remaining universities are dispersed further from one another and from the central cluster. However, they still surround the center, forming a third (FLACSO, UERJ, UNSAM, UNER, USB, USAL, UNAM, UNC, USP) and fourth (UdelaR, UnB, UCC) layer of a concentric circle. In summary, all universities in the network are clustered around the three most central institutions (PUCP, CIDE, and PUC).

Figure 2. Latin American Universities’ Connections across Comparative Politics Readings.

Source: Own elaboration.

Conceptually, the prominence of each university relies on its position and size within the network (Alonso and Carabali Reference Alonso and Carabali2019). These two indicators are crucial for assessing whether the canon is unified or not. The degree of centrality—the most widely used indicator in network analysis (Borgatti et al. Reference Borgatti, Ajay Mehra and Labianca2009)—gauges the total number of readings shared by “university X” with the other more central universities, determining each university’s position within the network. Footnote 25 A higher centrality value, standardized on a scale from 0 to 1, indicates a more central position within the network. Footnote 26 With a degree of centrality of 1, the PUCP, CIDE, and PUC are the network’s three most central universities, followed closely by a subgroup of five universities with a degree of centrality equal to or higher than 0.9 (UFRP, UTDT, UDP, UCA, and UniAndes). Footnote 27 As the shade of red becomes lighter in the figure, the universities’ degree of centrality decreases.

The size of each node reflects the total number of readings a university has in common with any other university. For instance, the PUC’s node is the biggest because, in total, it shares the greatest number of readings with other universities (118 readings). Footnote 28 In contrast, universities like UnB or UNAM are represented by tiny nodes because they barely share readings with other universities (respectively, they only share 10 and 14 readings with others).

It is worth noting that a higher degree of centrality for a university does not necessarily imply a larger node size. Put differently, a higher degree of centrality indicates that a university shares more readings with the more central universities of the network—not with any other university. The PUCP is an excellent example of this phenomenon. While it has a degree of centrality of 1, the highest possible value, its node size is relatively small. This is because it shares many readings with the other central universities in the network (e.g., PUC and CIDE) but only a few with more peripheral universities. A counterexample would be the UniAndes, which shares a great proportion of readings with other universities (hence, its node is large), but has relatively fewer readings in common with the network’s most prominent universities (hence, it is not at the center of the network).

In sum, our network analysis reveals a fairly cohesive model for instructing CP in the region, evident from the centralized arrangement of universities in the visualization. The next section will further evaluate the network’s underlying characteristics, devoting special attention to the types of readings incorporated and shared by universities to assess whether the North Americanization versus parochialism tension manifests in CP PhD curricula.

Reading Types’ Impact on Network Structure: Mainstream Dominance, Regional Engagement, and Scarce Parochialism

Universities present three possible types of readings: mainstream, regional, or parochial. Mainstream readings belong to the well-established canon of comparative politics, indicated by their inclusion in outlets indexed in Scopus. Regional readings are not published in Scopus-indexed outlets but offer a comparative approach when studying political phenomena. Parochial readings are neither published in Scopus-indexed outlets nor engaged in comparative analysis—they are exclusively focused on their home countries.

Figure 3 shows the proportion of different types of readings per university, organized by the most to the least central universities in the network.

Figure 3. Types of Readings per University.

Source: Own elaboration.

Most of the comparative politics readings offered in the region are mainstream (80%). The vast majority of universities focus their curricula on mainstream content, with 19 out of 21 universities in our sample offering over 50% of mainstream readings. Mainstream readings are predominantly authored in English (76%) by scholars from the Global North (78%). Footnote 29 The most common outlets for mainstream materials are Cambridge University Press for full books or selected book chapters (∼24%) and the American Political Science Review for journal articles (∼4%). Footnote 30 Their primary methodology is analytical narrative (42%), Footnote 31 followed by observational quantitative (26%) and qualitative (19%) methods. Footnote 32 Moreover, 85% of mainstream authors are men. Footnote 33 As we move further away from the central universities in the network, the proportion of mainstream readings decreases.

Contrary to expectations from the literature, only 5% of the offered materials, on average, are parochial. Parochial readings are the least commonly offered type of readings by all universities, both central and peripheral, thus demonstrating a consistent pattern of low parochialism across all institutions in the network. Unlike mainstream content, parochial readings are overwhelmingly produced in Spanish or Portuguese (94%) by Latin American scholars (95%). Like mainstream content, analytical narrative remains the primary research method (61%), followed by observational quantitative (24%) and qualitative (9%) methods. Again, men are the predominant authors, accounting for 90% of parochial materials. Siglo XXI Editores from Mexico and Editorial Alianza from Spain each account for approximately 5% of parochial publications, making them the most common outlets for this type of material. Footnote 34

Instead of exclusively studying their home countries through parochial materials, universities are more inclined to incorporate readings that facilitate cross-case comparisons from regional journals. These types of readings—which we refer to as regional—represent, on average, 15% of the total proportion of readings. These materials are typically published in regional sources such as the Instituto de Estudios Peruanos (Fondo Editorial), comprising approximately 18% of them, or Desarrollo Económico from Argentina, accounting for around 7%. Footnote 35 The proportion of regional readings in university curricula increases as we move away from the center of the network, where mainstream readings tend to be more prevalent. Footnote 36 Put differently, regional readings are most common among peripheral vis-à-vis central universities. Footnote 37 While they are also predominantly authored by men (87%) and heavily rely on analytical narrative (64%), they offer a more mixed picture than mainstream and parochial readings in other relevant dimensions. For instance, they rely more on qualitative (18%) than quantitative (7%) methods. Footnote 38 Moreover, they are neither overwhelmingly written in Spanish/Portuguese (61%) nor English (39%), and their authors are almost evenly distributed from the United States (30%), Europe (27%), and Latin America (35%).

So far, we have uncovered two main findings. First, our network analysis reveals notable centralization within the network structure. Second, universities offer distinct types of readings, primarily mainstream, with a non-trivial proportion of regional materials and a negligible amount of parochial content. Now, the question arises: are these two outcomes interconnected? In other words, does the sharing of specific types of readings among universities significantly influence the overall network structure?

Figure 4 shows the connections between universities based on the type of shared reading. Mainstream readings are represented by blue lines, regional readings by green lines, and parochial readings by red lines. The thicker the line in the visualization, the greater the interconnections between universities. Notably, the figure displays a prevalence of mainstream literature connecting the universities, evident in the abundance of blue lines. In contrast, the network exhibits limited sharing of regional readings, indicated by the sparse green lines, and even scarcer sharing of parochial readings, with virtually no red lines in the visualization.

Figure 4. Latin American Universities’ Connections per Type of CP Reading.

Source: Own elaboration.

Figure 5 zooms into specific connections between all universities regarding shared mainstream readings. This heatmap employs varying shades of blue to represent the intensity of mainstream readings shared between pairs of universities. Deeper blue indicates higher overlap. Numbers within each dyad range from 0 to 1; 0 indicates no shared mainstream readings, while 1 denotes complete overlap. More central universities in the network (e.g., CIDE, UniAndes, and PUC) share a significant number of mainstream materials, as indicated by the prevalence of darkest shades of blue in the upper part of the heatmap. These connections are the key to the network’s centralized and reasonably cohesive structure. In contrast, peripheral universities (e.g., UdelaR or UnB) tend to have less overlap in their mainstream curricula, evidenced by the prevalence of lighter shades of blue in the lower portion of the heatmap. Importantly, all universities share at least one mainstream reading with another university. Footnote 39

Figure 5. Shared Mainstream Readings across Universities.

Source: Own elaboration.

The cells or dyads should be interpreted as the proportion of shared readings of a university in the Y-axis over a university in X-axis. For example, take the dyad on column 1, row 6 (cell value: 0.84). That means that the UniAndes shares 0.84 of its mainstream materials with the PUCP, over the PUCP’s total mainstream materials. The same interpretation criterion applies to the upcoming heatmaps, Figures 6 and 7.

Figure 6. Shared Regional Readings across Universities.

Source: Own elaboration.

Figure 7. Shared Parochial Readings across Universities.

Source: Own elaboration.

Figure 6 reveals that, unlike mainstream content, regional readings are infrequently shared among universities, leading to a fragmentation of materials from Latin American sources. Put differently, this heatmap indicates that only a small proportion of regional readings are shared among a few universities, with no discernible clear or systematic pattern, as evidenced by the sparsely shaded green areas. Both central and peripheral universities in the network are occasionally connected in a seemingly random manner when it comes to regional content. Indeed, not even universities within the same country tend to share regional content, except for the two Mexican universities in our sample (CIDE and UNAM). These results suggest that future scholars encounter diverse materials from Latin America during their PhD studies.

Finally, Figure 7 illustrates the shared parochial readings among universities. The limited proportion of shared parochial readings is unsurprising, given their rarity in CP materials. Furthermore, parochial readings focus solely on a university’s home country, making them less likely to be shared with others. The heatmap shows only five pairs of universities sharing parochial materials, evident from the extremely few red areas. As expected, each pair comprises universities from the same country. Footnote 40

Discussion

This article represents the first comprehensive analysis of graduate-level comparative politics teaching in Latin America. To achieve this goal, we have compiled an original dataset consisting of comparative politics readings from 21 universities across nine Latin American countries. Our findings reveal a reasonably cohesive model for instructing comparative politics at the doctorate level in the region. Without neglecting relevant contrasts between universities, the network displays a clear centralized structure, indicating that most universities share a similar set of readings.

Our research contributes to an existing body of scholarship that emphasizes a central tension between North Americanization and parochialism in Latin American comparative politics (Tanaka Reference Tanaka2017; Freidenberg Reference Freidenberg2017; Codato et al. Reference Codato, Madeira and Bittencourt2020; Lucca Reference Lucca2021). Our network analysis, complemented by an examination of reading characteristics, offers a nuanced perspective on this ongoing debate within the literature. We found that the relatively uniform canon for teaching CP in the region’s graduate programs is explained by the inclusion of mainstream readings from the Global North, which are widely shared among universities. Contrary to expectations, our findings reveal that parochial content is nearly absent in these curricula.

Additionally, our findings challenge the aforementioned debate by highlighting the presence of an overlooked yet relevant category of academic content within university curricula: regional readings. These readings are typically drawn from regional sources and involve comparative analyses that extend beyond each university’s home country. Nevertheless, there is no consistent distribution of these regional readings among universities, as each institution tends to select its own set of such materials. As a result, doctoral students are not consistently exposed to similar CP readings originating from Latin America.

Is there a unified model of teaching comparative politics at the graduate level in the region, after all? In a broader sense, yes, as our network analysis has demonstrated. However, the more precise answer is both yes and no, depending on the type of readings under scrutiny. Yes, there is a unified model because emerging Latin American scholars receive similar mainstream training in comparative politics influenced by the Global North. And no, there is not a unified model because they consume diverse regional materials sourced from Latin American outlets. Essentially, while the mainstream canon imported from the Global North brings universities’ CP curricula closer together, the inclusion of regionally produced content sets them apart.

Drawing insights from Svampa (Reference Svampa2021), establishing a comparative politics canon rooted in Latin America could be pivotal in preventing the marginalization of regional academic production. To foster inter-country academic connections, the next step could involve establishing a uniform collection of regional readings shared across universities. By consolidating and disseminating a uniform selection of sound regional readings, Latin American comparative politics can maintain autonomy in the materials studied in graduate programs.

Rather than advocating a normative stance in favor of mainstream readings, we propose that integrating various types of readings could enrich the training of doctoral students in Latin America. Both parochial and regional readings offer distinct advantages for studying comparative politics in the region. For instance, they can provide a “dense knowledge” of cases, as highlighted by several scholars (Bejarano Reference Bejarano2015; Tanaka and Dargent Reference Tanaka and Dargent2015; Munck and Snyder Reference Munck and Snyder2019). Indeed, Global North scholars often utilize these materials to gain unique insights into the cases they study. While mainstream readings are essential for engaging PhD students with the core debates in the discipline, both regional and parochial materials are equally valuable for fostering the study of comparative politics from Latin America. This combination of assigned materials may help address the tension identified in the literature (Tanaka Reference Tanaka2017; Lucca Reference Lucca2021) between North-produced and localized academic knowledge.

Future research could assess an alternative operationalization strategy to classify the type of readings, addressing potential measurement biases. While Scopus is a widely accepted source, it might present certain publication biases, such as prioritizing English-speaking publications or not fully capturing research that provides “dense knowledge” of cases. Furthermore, to enhance our understanding of the topic, future research may expand the sample of universities studied to ideally encompass all comparative politics materials offered in Latin American PhD programs. Exploring the complete universe of CP materials would provide a more comprehensive view of doctoral students’ training in the region.

Additionally, investigating the evolution of CP curricula over time is a promising avenue of research. In this regard, we conducted an exploratory analysis of the evolution of the CP materials from two central universities in the network: PUC and PUCP. Footnote 41 We examined their materials from 2008 and 2012, respectively, to assess whether and how they have adapted and updated their curricula over the years. Footnote 42 Their past materials exhibit minimal changes compared to their current ones, indicating that both universities maintain central positions within the network when analyzing their older curricula. Footnote 43 Importantly, PhD programs in the region are relatively new, having emerged only in recent years, with no presence in the 1990s or early 2000s. Therefore, conducting a longitudinal analysis that could potentially reveal significant variations in the offered CP materials would require these programs to have been in place for a longer duration. Looking ahead, examining the evolution of the types of readings, together with their methodologies, language, and authorship, among other dimensions, would enrich our understanding of the discipline’s trajectory in the region.

Moreover, new research could delve into the professional and institutional profiles of universities. Such analyses could uncover potential relationships between universities’ institutional characteristics (such as professors’ training and country of origin, proportion of women in departments, and research funds availability) and their position within the network, as well as the types of readings offered.

Last but not least, future studies would benefit from cross-regional comparisons of graduate training in comparative politics. This approach could involve contrasting not only countries or regions within the Global South (e.g., Latin America with Africa or South Asia) but also between the Global South and the Global North (e.g., Latin America with the United States). Such comparisons could provide us with key insights into the academic training of future comparativists worldwide.

Acknowledgements

We thank Richard Snyder, Eva Rios, Rafael Piñeiro, and Tomas Dosek for their thoughtful and encouraging comments. We also thank Luciano Sigalov for his excellent research assistance. We are grateful to all the program directors and/or administrative staff who shared the requested materials for this paper with us.

Appendix

Table A1. Sample of Universities

Source: Own elaboration. The departments’ name, graduate program, and consulted materials translation from Spanish or Portuguese to English is ours.

Table A2. Latin American Universities’ Degree of Connectivity Measures

Source: Own elaboration.

Table A3. Language per Type of Reading

Source: Own elaboration.

Table A4. Authors’ Country of Origin per Type of Reading

Source: Own elaboration.

Table A5. Methodology per Type of Reading

Source: Own elaboration.

Table A6. Authors’ Gender per Type of Reading

Source: Own elaboration.

Table A7. List of Top Ten Outlets for Mainstream Readings

Source: Own elaboration.

Table A8. List of Top 10 Outlets for Parochial Readings

Source: Own elaboration.

Table A9. List of Top Ten Outlets for Regional Readings

Source: Own elaboration.

Table A10. List of Top Ten Assigned Readings

Source: Own elaboration. When the reading was offered in different languages across universities, we counted it as the same text. For example, La Quiebra de las Democracias (count = 8) was offered six times in Spanish and two in English.

Table A11. Latin American Universities’ Degree of Connectivity Measures

Source: Own elaboration. The variation in the metrics of the PUC 2008 and PUCP 2012 compared to the PUC and PUCP (that is, their most recent materials) can be attributed mostly to the inclusion of newer readings by these universities since 2008 and 2012, respectively, rather than modifications to their old ones.

Figure A.1. Latin American Universities’ Connections across Comparative Politics Readings (including PUC 2008 and PUCP 2012).

Source: Own elaboration.

Footnotes

1 Following Tanaka and Dargent (Reference Tanaka and Dargent2015) and Lucca (Reference Lucca2021), within this context, the term “North Americanization” does not refer to the geographic region comprising Canada, the United States, and Mexico. Instead, it conceptually embodies the notion of the Global North, with a primary emphasis on the United States while also considering Western Europe.

2 For exceptions, please refer to Altman (Reference Altman2006) and Freidenberg (Reference Freidenberg2017).

3 In this article, we use the terms “readings,” “content,” and “materials” interchangeably.

4 Scopus is a reputable indexing database with full-text links produced by Elsevier Company, an international publishing business. Some PS investigations that have utilized Scopus include Marenco (Reference Marenco2014); Codato et al. (Reference Codato, Madeira and Bittencourt2020); Universitas Islam Negeri (Reference Universitas Islam Negeri, Zuhri Purwokerto and Chakim2022); and Jokić et al. (Reference Jokić, Mervar and Mateljan2019).

5 Importantly, mainstream readings are not exclusively sourced from US or European publishers. For instance, the Revista de Ciencia Política (Santiago) and Dados: Revista de Ciências Sociais are notable examples of mainstream outlets in Spanish and Portuguese, respectively.

6 For instance, while Mexico offers 72 undergraduate programs in political science, Uruguay only offers two (Bulcourf and Cardozo Reference Bulcourf and Cardozo2017).

7 For example, Karl Marx’s and Antonio Gramsci’s written production were relevant to many Latin American social scientists. Moreover, Cardoso’s and Falleto’s work on dependency and development (1979) was influenced by European intellectuals, as well as José Carlos Mariátegui’s books and essays (Munck and Snyder Reference Munck and Snyder2019).

8 Specifically, Freidenberg and Malamud (Reference Freidenberg and Malamud2017) explore the intellectual trajectories of scholars from Brazil, Argentina, and Uruguay.

9 For instance, some US universities offer research visits to Latin American scholars for an academic semester (Munck and Snyder Reference Munck and Snyder2019).

10 As we began contacting the universities, we discovered that certain institutions did not offer a PhD in Political Science, such as the Universidad Centroamericana José Simeón Cañas (El Salvador). We also discovered that some universities did have a PhD in Political Science but lacked a comprehensive exam or any course on comparative politics, like the Universidad Iberoamericana (Mexico). For these reasons, we excluded all these universities from our study.

11 Some universities do not have a PS Department, as evidenced by Table A.1. In those cases, we contacted the appropriate department responsible for overseeing political science curricula.

12 In some instances, we accessed the data through informal channels, i.e., contacting colleagues we are acquainted with and requesting their assistance in obtaining the information. Examples include the UNSAM and PUCP. In other cases, we accessed the data directly through the university’s website, e.g., the USB.

13 Some universities promptly provided the requested information after our initial contact. In contrast, others responded after multiple follow-up emails, ranging from our second to fifth attempt. Some universities never responded. List of universities that did not respond by country: Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, and the Universidade Estadual de Campinas (Brazil); Universidad del Rosario (Colombia); Universidad de Occidente (Guatemala); Universidad de Asunción (Paraguay); Universidad de Belgrano and Universidad Nacional de Córdoba (Argentina); Universidad de Guadalajara, Universidad Internacional de América, Universidad Autónoma de Zacatecas, Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, and El Colegio de Veracruz (Mexico); Universidad Central de Venezuela and Universidad Rafael Belloso Chacín (Venezuela).

14 Universidad Torcuato Di Tella, UTDT; Universidad Nacional de Entre Ríos, UNER; Universidad Católica Argentina, UCA; Universidad del Salvador, USAL; Universidad Nacional de San Martín, UNSAM; and Universidad Católica de Córdoba, UCC.

15 Universidade de São Paulo, USP; Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, UERJ; Universidade de Brasília, UnB; and Universidade Federal do Paraná, UFRP.

16 Universidad de Los Andes, UniAndes; Universidad Nacional de Colombia, UNC; and Universidad del Externado, UExternado.

17 Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, PUC; and Universidad Diego Portales, UDP.

18 Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas, CIDE; and Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, UNAM.

19 Universidad de la República, UdelaR.

20 Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, PUCP.

21 Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, FLACSO.

22 Universidad Simón Bolívar, USB.

23 Out of the 21 universities in our sample, 10 are public (UNER, UNSAM, USP, UERJ, UNB, UFRP, UNC, CIDE, UNAM, USB) and 1 are private (UTDT, UCA, USAL, UCC, UniAndes, UExternado, PUC, UDP, UdelaR, PUCP, FLACSO).

24 The thicker a line between two universities, the more readings they share.

25 We estimated other metrics (authority score and closeness) to ensure our results were consistent across different central tendency indicators (see Table A.2).

26 Considering that not all universities offer the same number of readings in CP (for instance, the PUC offers 185 while the UCC offers 57), we built a standardized measure of their total quantity of offered materials to mitigate the overrepresentation of universities with the larger number of readings in the network (Csárdi and Nepusz Reference Csárdi and Nepusz2006).

27 Table A.2 summarizes the estimated statistical metrics to interpret the network.

28 Refer to Table A.2 for detailed information on each university’s total number of readings, total number of shared readings, and percentage of shared readings.

29 Table A.3 summarizes the language per type of reading. Table A.4 synthesizes the authors’ region of origin per type of reading.

30 See the list of top ten outlets for mainstream readings in Table A.7.

31 Analytical narrative clusters readings that critically describe and explain political phenomena without necessarily a well-outlined research design but through an inductive and depth knowledge of cases. O’Donnell’s work on “brown areas” (Reference O’Donnell1993) and “delegative democracy” (Reference O’Donnell1994) are examples of readings within this category.

32 Table A.5 summarizes the methods used per type of reading.

33 Table A.6 synthesizes the authors’ gender per type of reading.

34 See the list of top ten outlets for parochial readings in Table A.8.

35 See the list of top ten outlets for regional readings in Table A.9.

36 The PUCP and the UExternado break this pattern. The PUCP has a high proportion of regional readings (33%) and is one of the most central universities in the network. The UExternado has 0% of regional readings (100% mainstream) and is the most peripheral university in the network.

37 In some cases, like the UNER (48%) or UNC (45%), regional readings constitute almost half of their total assigned materials.

38 Unlike regional readings, we found a grater prevalence of quantitative methods in parochial content. This can be attributed to the tendency of parochial content to rely on survey and legislative data for quantitative examination of their study phenomena. In contrast, regional readings frequently utilize the comparative method to analyze two or more cases of interest.

39 This predominance of mainstream literature is also reflected in the readings’ top ten ranking. Gary Cox, Sydney Tarrow, Kathleen Thelen, and Juan Linz, among others, are all well-recognized Global North scholars who made invaluable contributions to the field (see Table A.10).

40 Such pairs are: UNAM-CIDE (Mexico); and USAL-UCC, USAL-UTDT, UNSAM-UTDT, and UCC-UTDT (Argentina).

41 We excluded the CIDE from this analysis because its PhD program began in 2017.

42 The PUC’s and the PUCP’s PhD program started in 2007 and 2010, respectively.

43 See Figure A.1. for the network including the older materials of the PUC and the PUCP, and Table A.11. for the network’s metrics.

References

Alfaro Redondo, Ronald, and Cullell, Jorge Vargas. 2005. Ciencia política en Costa Rica: búsqueda de identidad disciplinaria. Revista de Ciencia Política (Santiago) 25, 1: 124135. https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-090X2005000100009.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alonso, Julio, and Carabali, Jaime. 2019. Breve tuturial para visualizar y calcular métricas de redes (grafos) In R (para económistas). Universidad Icesi. Cali: Universdad Icesi.Google Scholar
Altman, David. 2006. From Fukuoka to Santiago: Institutionalization of Political Science in Latin America. PS: Political Science & Politics 39, 1: 196203. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1049096506220341.Google Scholar
Altman, David. 2012. Where Is Knowledge Generated? On the Productivity and Impact of Political Science Departments in Latin America. European Political Science 11, 1: 7187. https://doi.org/10.1057/eps.2010.82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amorim Neto, Octavio, and Santos, Fabiano. 2015. La ciencia política en Brasil en la última década: la nacionalización y la lenta superación del parroquialismo. Revista de Ciencia Política (Santiago) 35, 1: 1931. https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-090X2015000100002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Artiga-González, Álvaro. 2006. Las elecciones 2006 en perspectiva. ECA: Estudios Centroamericanos 61, 688–89: 237–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barrientos Del Monte, Fernando. 2013. La ciencia política en América Latina: una breve introducción histórica. Convergencia 20, 61: 105–33.Google Scholar
Barrientos Del Monte, Fernando. 2015. Crecimiento e institucionalización de la ciencia política en México. Revista de Ciencia Política (Santiago) 35, 1: 95120. https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-090X2015000100006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Basabe-Serrano, S., and Huertas-Hernandez, S. 2018. The state of political science research on Latin America. Revista Española de Ciencia Política 47, 153170.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bejarano, Ana María. 2015. Migraciones intelectuales de sur a norte y de norte a sur.” In Qué implica hacer ciencia política desde el sur y desde el norte, ed. Martin Tanaka and Eduardo Dargent. Lima: Pontificia Universidad Cátolica del Perú. 137–46.Google Scholar
Borgatti, Stephen P., Ajay Mehra, Daniel J. Brass, and Labianca, Giuseppe. 2009. Network Analysis in the Social Sciences. Science 323, 5916: 892–95. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1165821.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bulcourf, Pablo. 2012. El arte de nombrar: Guillermo O’Donnell y el desarrollo de la ciencia política en América latina. Temas y Debates 16 (24): 123–43.Google Scholar
Bulcourf, Pablo, and Cardozo, Nelson D.. 2017. La ciencia política en América Latina: un análisis comparado de su desarrollo. In La ciencia política sobre América política. Docencia e investigación en perspectiva comparada, ed. Flavia Freidenberg. Santo Domingo: Editorial FUNGLODE.Google Scholar
Buquet, D. 2012. El desarrollo de la Ciencia Política en Uruguay. Política. Revista De Ciencia Política 50, 1: 529. https://doi.org/10.5354/0719-5338.2012.22647.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calvo, Ernesto, Elverdín, A., Sofía, Kessler, Gabriel, and Victoria Murillo, M.. 2019. Investigando las influencias internacionales en las ciencias sociales argentinas. Revista Latinoamericana de Metodología de Las Ciencias Sociales (Relmecs) 9, 2: e055. https://doi.org/10.24215/18537863e055.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chasquetti, Daniel. 2010. El lento camino de la política comparada en Uruguay. In La enseñanza de la ciencia política en las Universidades de América Latina, 103–18. Rosario: Editorial Ciudad Gótica.Google Scholar
Chasquetti, Daniel. 2017. Una explicación sobre la supervivencia de la política comparada en la región. In La ciencia política sobre América política. Docencia e investigación en perspectiva comparada, ed. Flavia Freidenberg. Santo Domingo: Editorial FUNGLODE.Google Scholar
Codato, Adriano, Madeira, Rafael, and Bittencourt, Maiane. 2020. Political Science in Latin America: A Scientometric Analysis. Brazilian Political Science Review 14, 3: e0007.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Csárdi, Gabor, and Nepusz, Tomás. 2005. The Igraph Software Package for Complex Network Research. InterJournal Complex Systems: 1695.Google Scholar
D’Alessandro, Martín Omar. 2013. Las desventajas de la política comparada en América Latina: énfasis en el caso argentino. Revista Debates 7, 3: 89. https://doi.org/10.22456/1982-5269.40389.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Durán-Martínez, Angélica, Sierra, Jazmin, and Snyder, Richard. 2023. La economía política de la investigación en ciencias sociales en América Latina. Estudios Sociológicos de El Colegio de México 41, Especial: 259364. https://doi.org/10.24201/es.2023v41nEspecial.2394.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Freidenberg, Flavia, ed. 2017. La ciencia política sobre América Latina: docencia e investigación en perspectiva comparada, 1st ed. (Santo Domingo: Editorial FUNGLODE).Google Scholar
Freidenberg, Flavia, and Malamud, Andrés. 2013. Politólogos on the Run: Contrasting Paths to Internationalization of Southern Cone Political Scientists. Latin American Politics and Society 55, 1: 121. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1548-2456.2012.00181.x.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Freidenberg, Flavia, and Malamud, Andrés. 2017. Politólogos en fuga: patrones divergentes de emigración y retorno en el Cono Sur. In La ciencia política sobre América política. Docencia e investigación en perspectiva comparada, ed. Flavia Freidenberg. Santo Domingo: Editorial FUNGLODE. 635665.Google Scholar
Fuentes, Claudio, and Santana, Graciela. 2005. El “boom” de la ciencia política en Chile: escuelas, mercado y tendencias. Revista de Ciencia Política (Santiago) 25, 1: 1639. https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-090X2005000100002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heiss, Claudia. 2015. Ciencia política en Chile: ¿una disciplina consolidada? Revista de Ciencia Política (Santiago) 35, 1: 4770. https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-090X2015000100004.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huntington, Samuel P. 1991. Democracy’s Third Wave. Journal of Democracy 2, 2: 1234. https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.1991.0016.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jokić, Maja, Mervar, Andrea, and Mateljan, Stjepan. 2019. The Development of Political Science in Central and Eastern Europe: Bibliometric Perspective, 1996–2013. European Political Science 18, 3: 491509. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41304-018-0191-6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lucca, Juan Bautista. 2021. La ciencia política comparada en México: un retrato cualitativo. Revista Uruguaya de Ciencia Política 30, 2: 123148.Google Scholar
Marenco, André. 2014. The Three Achilles’ Heels of Brazilian Political Science. Brazilian Political Science Review 8, 3: 338. https://doi.org/10.1590/1981-38212014000100019.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mejía Acosta, Andrés, Freidenberg, Flavia, and Pachano, Simón. 2005. La ciencia política en Ecuador: un reflejo de su fragilidad democrática (1978–2005). Revista de Ciencia Política (Santiago) 25, 1: 147161. https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-090X2005000100011.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Munck, Gerardo L. 2007. Agendas y estrategias de investigación en el estudio de la política latinoamericana. Revista de Ciencia Política (Santiago) 27, 1: 321. https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-090X2007000200001.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Munck, Gerardo L, and Snyder, Richard. 2019. Comparative Politics at a Crossroad: Problems, Opportunities and Prospects from the North and South. Política y Gobierno 26, 1: 139–58.Google Scholar
O’Donnell, G. Schmitter, P. C. and Whitehead, L. Eds. 1986. Transitions from Authoritarian Rule: Comparative Perspectives (Vol. 3). JHU Press.Google Scholar
O’Donnell, Guillermo A. 1973. Modernization and Bureaucratic-Authoritarianism: Studies in South American Politics. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
O’Donnell, Guillermo A. 1993. On the State, Democratization and Some Conceptual Problems: A Latin American View with Glances at Some Postcommunist Countries. World Development 21, 8: 1355–69. https://doi.org/10.1016/0305-750X(93)90048-E.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O’Donnell, Guillermo A. 1994. Delegative Democracy. Journal of Democracy 5, 1: 5569. https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.1994.0010.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O’Donnell, Guillermo A., and Schmitter, Philippe C.. 2013. Tentative Conclusions about Uncertain Democracies. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.Google Scholar
Pérez Bentancur, Verónica, Piñeiro, R. Rafael, and Rosenblatt, Fernando. 2020. How Party Activism Survives: Uruguay’s Frente Amplio. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ravecca, Paulo. 2019. The Politics of Political Science: Re-Writing Latin American Experiences. Abingdon: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rocha, Cecilia. 2012. La ciencia política en Uruguay (1989–2009): temas, teorías, y metodología. Revista Uruguaya de Ciencia Política 21: 97127.Google Scholar
Svampa, Maristella. 2021. Debates latinoamericanos: indianismo, desarrollo, dependencia, populismo, 2nd ed. (Buenos Aires: Edhasa).Google Scholar
Tanaka, Martin. 2017. De la crítica política a la ciencia política: notas hacia un balance. In La ciencia política sobre América política. Docencia e investigación en perspectiva comparada, ed. Flavia Freidenberg. Santo Domingo: Editorial FUNGLODE.Google Scholar
Tanaka, Martin, and Dargent, Eduardo, eds. 2015. ¿Qué implica hacer ciencia política desde el sur y desde el norte? Lima: Pontificia Universidad Cátolica del Perú.Google Scholar
Universitas Islam Negeri, K. H., Zuhri Purwokerto, Saifuddin, and Chakim, Sulkhan. 2022. Bibliometric Analysis: Symbolic Power Publication Trends in Scopus. Com. Journal of Social and Political Sciences 5, 2: 153163. https://doi.org/10.31014/aior.1991.05.02.355.Google Scholar
Varnoux Garay, Marcelo. 2005. La ciencia política en Bolivia: entre la reforma política y la crisis de la democracia. Revista de Ciencia Política (Santiago) 25, 1: 92100. https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-090X2005000100006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weyland, K. 2015. The Present Opportunities for Latin American Political Science. Qué implica hacer ciencia política desde el sur y desde el norte, 121135.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Operationalization of Reading Types.Source: Own elaboration.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Latin American Universities’ Connections across Comparative Politics Readings.Source: Own elaboration.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Types of Readings per University.Source: Own elaboration.

Figure 3

Figure 4. Latin American Universities’ Connections per Type of CP Reading.Source: Own elaboration.

Figure 4

Figure 5. Shared Mainstream Readings across Universities.Source: Own elaboration.

Figure 5

Figure 6. Shared Regional Readings across Universities.Source: Own elaboration.

Figure 6

Figure 7. Shared Parochial Readings across Universities.Source: Own elaboration.

Figure 7

Table A1. Sample of Universities

Figure 8

Table A2. Latin American Universities’ Degree of Connectivity Measures

Figure 9

Table A3. Language per Type of Reading

Figure 10

Table A4. Authors’ Country of Origin per Type of Reading

Figure 11

Table A5. Methodology per Type of Reading

Figure 12

Table A6. Authors’ Gender per Type of Reading

Figure 13

Table A7. List of Top Ten Outlets for Mainstream Readings

Figure 14

Table A8. List of Top 10 Outlets for Parochial Readings

Figure 15

Table A9. List of Top Ten Outlets for Regional Readings

Figure 16

Table A10. List of Top Ten Assigned Readings

Figure 17

Table A11. Latin American Universities’ Degree of Connectivity Measures

Figure 18

Figure A.1. Latin American Universities’ Connections across Comparative Politics Readings (including PUC 2008 and PUCP 2012).Source: Own elaboration.