One of the central tasks facing any discipline is deciding what
topics, among a vast range of possibilities, to feature in its research
agenda. Once a discipline's practitioners have settled on the
agenda, they must then determine what methods can best illuminate those
topics. This essay argues that political science today needs to give
higher priority to studies of the processes, especially the
political processes, through which conceptions of political
membership, allegiance, and identity are formed and transformed. To do
this, we need to identify, to a greater extent than most political
scientists have, the historical contexts of the conflicts and political
institutions that have contributed to political identities and
commitments, and our approaches must provide empathetic interpretive
understandings of human consciousnesses and values. We cannot rely
solely, or even predominantly, on efforts to identify abstract,
ahistorical, and enduring regularities in political behavior such as
those that prevailed during the behavioralist era of modern American
political science. Nor can we depend primarily on approaches, ascendant
in our discipline's more recent “rational choice”
phase, that enhance our formal grasp of instrumental rationality. Those
sorts of work can certainly offer important contributions, but in
general they are most effective as elements in projects that rest
extensively on contextually and historically informed interpretive
judgments.Rogers M. Smith is the author
of Stories of Peoplehood: The Politics and Morals of Political
Membership (Cambridge University Press, 2003) and Civic Ideals:
Conflicting Visions of Citizenship in U.S. History (Yale University
Press, 1997). For their feedback on earlier drafts of this essay, the author
thanks discussants and audience respondents from the annual meeting of the
American Political Science Association in September 2002, and the Yale
Conference on Problems and Methods in Political Science in December 2002.
He also thanks the editorial staff and anonymous reviewers of
Perspectives on Politics for many helpful suggestions and
corrections.