History of Political Conflict

Regular price €75.99
A01=Julia Cage
A01=Thomas Piketty
Author_Julia Cage
Author_Thomas Piketty
bourgeois politics
Category=JHB
Category=JP
Category=JPF
Category=JPHF
Category=JPWC
class divisions
class politics
data analysis
democratic systems
economic inequality
elections
electoral history
electoral sociology
Emmanuel Todd Who is Charlie?
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
european politics
french history
french politics
french revolution
french society
Herrick Chapman France's Long Reconstruction
historical sociology
Pierre Rosanvallon Democracy Past and Future
political competition
political economy
political history
political ideologies
political parties
political polarization
political sociology
Robert Paxton Vichy France
Robert Tombs The French and Their Revolution
social class
Thomas Piketty Capital in the Twenty-First Century
voting behavior
voting patterns
working class politics

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674248434
  • Weight: 1587g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Aug 2025
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A pioneering history of voting and inequality, drawing on an unprecedented data set covering more than two centuries of sociological findings.

Who votes for whom and why? Julia Cagé and Thomas Piketty comb through more than two hundred years of data from some 36,000 French municipalities to show how inequality has shaped the formation of political coalitions, with stark consequences for economic and political development.

Cagé and Piketty argue that today’s tripartite division of French political life—a competition among a bourgeois central bloc and distinct factions of the urban and rural working classes—has a precise, and revealing, historical analogue. To understand contemporary tensions, we can look to the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth, another period when runaway economic inequality produced such a three-way rivalry. Cagé and Piketty show that tripartition has always been unstable, whereas the binary political conflict enabled by relative equality and typical of most of the twentieth century facilitated social and economic progress. Comparing these configurations over time helps us envisage possible trajectories for the French political system in the coming decades.

With its many changes in governmental structure since 1789, France is an ideal laboratory for studying the vicissitudes of modern political life in general, and electoral democracy in particular. Using France as a model, A History of Political Conflict offers a powerful framework for understanding the complex project of building and sustaining democratic majorities.

Julia Cagé is Professor of Economics at Sciences Po Paris and the author of Saving the Media and The Price of Democracy. Thomas Piketty is Professor of Economics and Economic History at the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences and the Paris School of Economics. His books include A Brief History of Equality, Capital and Ideology, and the bestselling Capital in the Twenty-First Century.