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Lipset, Seymour Martin
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Lipset, Seymour Martin

(born March 18, 1922, New York City, N.Y., U.S.—died Dec. 31, 2006, Arlington, Va.) U.S. sociologist and political scientist. He received his bachelor's degree from the City College of New York and his Ph.D. from Columbia University, where he later taught (1950–56). While teaching at the University of California, Berkeley (1956–66), he also served as director of its Institute of International Studies (1962–66). Since then he has taught at Harvard University, Stanford University, and George Mason University. His many books about class structure, elite behaviour, and political parties have significantly shaped the study of comparative politics.


Lipset, Seymour Martin (1922–  ) social scientist; born in New York City. His distinguished career in academia and public policy included faculty appointments at the University of California: Berkeley (1956–66), Harvard (1965–75), and Stanford's Hoover Institution (1975–92). He wrote and edited many important works on class structure, elites, and comparative politics, most notably Agrarian Socialism (1950), Class, Status and Power (1953) and Political Man (1960).


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In his book American Exceptionalism: A Double-Edged Sword, (3) Seymour Martin Lipset offers the following summary: Born out of revolution, the United States is a country organized around an ideology which includes a set of dogmas about the nature of a good society.
Chris Adams looks at why Manitoba voters reelected their NDP government while Saskatchewan voters defeated theirs, and John Richards presents an appreciation of Seymour Martin Lipset, author of the classic study of North America's first social democratic government, Tommy Douglas's CCF in Saskatchewan.
Socialism, as Seymour Martin Lipset, the great guru of US political science, once observed, has no roots and no relevance here.
 
 
 
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