DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
PROGRAM DESCRIPTION
Subjects Covered: The political science collection supports the teaching and research conducted in the Department of Political Science. The collection includes materials relating to United States government, comparative governments, politics, international relations, political theory, philosophy of the state, international security, mass movements, intelligence, terrorism, political power, political psychology, electoral behavior, leadership, public opinion survey research, international political economy, social choice and game theory, international organizations, law, civil rights, and constitutional guarantees.
The political science collection is also developed to supplement general interest in United States government and politics within the university community as a whole.
Departments and Users Served : The political science collection serves students and faculty in the Department of Political Science, College of Arts and Sciences. The collection also serves students and faculty in the Public Administration Program, as well as students and faculty studying government and politics in University College and in Evening and Continuing Education. Through direct patron borrowing, the political science collection also serves faculty and students of political science within the OhioLINK system.
Peripheral users within the University include faculty and students in the College of Business Administration, especially those engaged in studying international business and faculty and students in the Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences, studying political economy.
Students and faculty in the departments of Psychology and Sociology also make use of the political science collection, particularly for information about mass behavior, electoral behavior, political psychology, leadership, power, and political extremism. The Department of Philosophy draws on aspects of the political science collection related to philosophy of governing systems. History students and faculty make use of those aspects of the political science collection that cover political history, diplomacy, foreign affairs, and emigration and immigration. Geography faculty and students use works about political geography. Faculty and students in the College of Law likewise make occasional use of the political science collection.
Various of the University's studies programs, notably African American Studies, Asian Studies, Judaic Studies, Latin American Studies, Russian and East European Studies, Public Administration, and Women's Studies also use the political science collection.
The political science collection in public opinion and survey research draws users from Communications, Journalism, Sociology, and Psychology within the College of Arts and Sciences, from Marketing Research in the College of Business Administration, and from Community Planning and Public Health in the College of Design, Art, Architecture, and Planning.
International students also use the political science collection for
information about government and politics in their respective countries
of origin.
Quantitative Information : http://ucaswww.mcm.uc.edu/polisci/
The Faculty : There are 14 faculty members in the Political Science Department. Faculty publish the results of their research in the field's leading journals, in addition to monographic publications, book reviews, and web sites.
Faculty in the Department of Political Science have been awarded fellowships and grants from numerous institutes and foundations including Fulbright Programs, the U.S. Peace Institute, the MacArthur Consortium on International Peace and Cooperation, the National Science Foundation, and the Ohio Humanities Council.
Degrees Granted:
Undergraduate: The Department of Political Science offers undergraduate majors in Political Science and in International Affairs leading to the Bachelor of Arts. The major in International Affairs requires 18 foreign language credits beyond the general A&S language requirement in either French, Spanish, German, or Russian or 9 credits beyond the A&S requirement for Japanese. Course work in other foreign languages must be granted special approval.
For detailed information about the general political science undergraduate
major visit:
http://ucaswww.mcm.uc.edu/CollegeMain/student/advising/majors/2000pdf/PoliSci.pdf
For detailed information about the International Affairs Undergraduate Major in Political Science visit: http://ucaswww.mcm.uc.edu/CollegeMain/student/advising/majors/2000pdf/IntrAff.pdf
Graduate: The Political Science Department offers courses leading to the MA and Ph.D. degrees. The graduate program provides instruction in five areas of political science: U.S. government and politics, comparative government and politics, methodology, international relations, and political theory.
For detailed information about the graduate program in Political Science visit http://ucaswww.mcm.uc.edu/polisci/grad.htm.
Special Programs and Accreditation Requirements : The Political Science Department offers a Certificate in Public Opinion and Survey Research that provides professional training at the Master's level in the skills necessary to design and conduct surveys, analyze survey results, write reports, and make survey results public.
Detailed information about the Certificate in Public Opinion and Survey Research may be read at http://ucaswww.mcm.uc.edu/polisci/grad.htm.
The Political Science Department participates in the Asian Studies, Latin American Studies, and Women's Studies programs.
Grants and Special Funding : The political science
collection receives its funding from the library's general monographic
and serial allocations. Political Science is a discipline supported
by the Charles P. Taft Memorial Fund, which enables the collection to
add expensive research materials that would otherwise be beyond the
normal collecting scope. The Seasongood Fund supports collection development
in U.S. government and politics.
GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF THE COLLECTION
Location: The political science collection is located in the Langsam Library, although space considerations dictate that more of the older, little circulated monographs and discontinued serials are being moved to SWORD, the library's off site cooperative storage facility.
Other Collections Supporting the Program
Internal : The political science collection draws on the Classics Library for material relating to government, politics, and philosophy of the State in the classical world. International relations and comparative politics are supplemented by the Classic Library's Modern Greek collection.
The Institute for Policy Research holdings supplement the public opinion and survey research materials in the political science collection. The IPR Archive includes studies from the Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research, the National Opinion Research Center, and the International Survey Library (Roper Center).
Other collections supporting political science are the College of Law, including its Urban Morgan Institute on Human Rights, as well as these collections located in the Langsam Library: government documents, history, economics, philosophy, sociology, psychology, geography, communications, journalism, and business. DAAP supports the collection in art and the state and in political cartoons.
External: The Government and Business Department of the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County supports the political science collection as does the Center for Research Libraries and the combined collections of the colleges and universities in Ohio through OhioLINK.
Collection History: Political Economy was among the initial course offerings in the University of Cincinnati's Academic Department when it was fully organized in 1875. At the University's first commencement exercises, held on June 20, 1878, seven members of the graduating class read essays, of which four focused on political topics.
Nevertheless, a separate course of studies in political science was slow to develop. For the balance of the nineteenth century political economy remained coupled to history.
In 1889, the Academic Committee of the Board of Trustees made history and political economy compulsory subjects of study. When McMicken College was reorganized in 1900, the professorship of history and political science was dissolved and two new chairs were established in its place. These were the chair of history and the chair of economics and civics, the later named in honor of David Sinton who had endowed the academic programs in McMicken College with $100,000 the preceding year.
The University had grown sufficiently to dedicate a Graduate School in 1906. Reflecting the University's new strength numerous appointments were made to the faculty during this period, including a professor of political science in 1908.
Political Science came into its own during the First World War. Not only did the Department offer courses on the problems of the war, but it also participated in a series of lectures on the war's causes and issues.
In 1930 Mrs. Charles P. Taft established a 2 million dollar fund as a memorial to her husband, the interest from which was designated for the advancement of study and teaching in the humanities within the College of Liberal Arts and the University's Graduate School. The memorial also made provisions for library enrichment.
Although Political Science was not among the 8 departments Mrs. Taft specifically designated as recipients of Taft money, the library's budget has nevertheless received an annual income to supplement the political science collection from the Taft A&S Department Fund. In 1990, the Taft Trustees extended access to the Department of Political Science to the Taft Special Funds for non-serial materials in excess of $1,000.00. This has allowed political science to begin to build depth into its collections in presidential studies, opinion polling, foreign affairs, and national security.
With the exception of a few stringent years of university-wide cutbacks, the political science collection grew steadily in the closing decades of the 20th century. Stable monographic and serial budgets, adequately adjusted for inflation, coupled with access to Taft Memorial Funds combine to enable the University to build a collection commensurate with a Research 1 institution in selected areas of political science.
(Historical sketch of the Political Department comes from Reginald C. McGrane, The University of Cincinnati: A Success Story in Urban Higher Education, New York: Harper and Row, Publishers, 1963).
General Level of Collecting: Areas of the political science collection that support active research and teaching at the University are currently collected at basic through research levels. Areas in which there is no current teaching or research are collected at minimal or basic. Areas of previous faculty interest are maintained at a basic level so that the collection's integrity is continued.
Political Science also assumes responsibility for collecting material
of general interest about U.S. government and politics for the use of
the University community.
SPECIFIC ASPECTS OF THE COLLECTION
Call Numbers: As a discipline of study political science concerns itself with the history, form, organization, and administration of the State and its subdivisions, including relationships with other states or subdivisions. The discipline also engages in analysis of political behavior and activity, and in political theory.
Political treatment may be found throughout the Library of Congress classification code. As practiced at the University of Cincinnati these call numbers represent the areas of political science most generally collected:
AY..............Yearbooks, almanacs, directories
B69-5739..........Individual philosophers (Bodin, Locke, etc.)
HA........Statistics
HB848-3697.....Demography, vital statistics
HD101-1395.....Land use, especially public lands
HD3611-4730.9...The State and industrial organization
HD4801-8943......Labor, especially unemployment, social security, state labor
HE............Public policy aspects of transportation and communication
HJ..........Public finance and budget
HS............Political societies
HV.... .....Political aspects of social and public welfare
HX........Socialism, communism, anarchism
J.........Official documents
JA.........Political science collections
JC.........Political theory, forms of the state, constitutional history
JF.........Organs and functions of government, federal-state relations, political rights and guarantees, political parties
JK-JQ.........Individual nations
JS..........Local government
JX.........International law, diplomatic relations, diplomatic services, international organizations
KF........U.S. law
KFO........Laws of Ohio
UA........National defense
Z5051-7999......Subject bibliographies
Current and Retrospective Collecting: Although retrospective collecting is also practiced, emphasis is placed on the acquisition of current materials.
Time Period Collected: The political science collection places emphasis on the modern State from the Renaissance forward, with particular emphasis on the contemporary State.
Levels and Treatments: Although the political science collection serves the needs of the University community and includes material of general interest relating to U.S. government and politics, the greater part of the collection represents works suitable for upper division students, graduate students, and faculty research. Textbooks are infrequently collected, if at all.
Languages: English is the primary language of the collection. Material related to international affairs is occasionally collected in other languages but preference is given to works in English translation when these are available.
Geographical Areas: The political science collection places particular emphasis on the United States, Canada, Great Britain, Western Europe, Russia, Eastern Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America.
Types of Resources: The political science collection includes monographs, series, society publications, journals, atlases, indexes, abstracts, bibliographies, handbooks, encyclopedias, political dictionaries, government publications, and web sites.
Resource Formats: The political science collection includes print, microform, video, and digital formats. Print remains predominant.
Endowed Areas Supported by Restricted Funds: The
Charles P. Taft Memorial Fund supports all areas of political science
and is divided into two parts, one to be used at the discretion of the
political science bibliographer for material costing less than $1,000
and the other controlled by a faculty committee to which application
must be made for research materials in excess of $1,000. The Seasongood
Fund supports the acquisition of current material about U.S. government
and politics.
ACQUISITION PROCESS
Approval Plans: The political science collection participates in the approval plan supplied by Yankee Book Peddler.
Firm Orders: Firm orders for the political science collection are selected from a variety of sources including vender notification slips, direct mail brochures, publisher catalogs, and book reviewing publications.
Standing Orders: The political science collection maintains standing orders for journal publications, monographic series, and Internet resources.
Document Suppliers: The political science collection relies heavily on direct patron access through OhioLINK and the Library's Interlibrary Loan Department for access to items that are not in our collection, are in circulation, or are missing from our collection.
Special Vendors: The political science collection relies on the Acquisition Department to determine if a special vendor is needed to acquire requested materials.
Unique Source: Gallup Public Opinion Survey 1938-1988
raw data sets. These original survey tapes were purchased for the library
with Taft Special Funds. They have been converted from magnetic tape
to a digitized format and reside on the Institute for Policy Research
web page at http://www.ipr.uc.edu.
Sally Moffitt, Bibliographer
Political Science
September 25, 2000