Christopher K. Frantz Saba Siddiki Frantz Institutional Grammar

Institutional Grammar

von Christopher K. Frantz Saba Siddiki

Foundations and Applications for Institutional Analysis

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Beschreibung

“This book represents the definitive text on the grammar of institutions.”

Edella Schlager, Professor, University of Arizona, USA

“… [this] book revolutionizes the study of institutions and provides a sturdy foundation for building knowledge about them.”

Christopher M. Weible, Professor, University of Colorado Denver, USA

“… [the] Institutional Grammar 2.0 [is] a de-facto open standard for a new field we might call 'Computational Institutional Analysis.'”

Charlie Schweik, Professor, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

This book provides a comprehensive introduction to the Institutional Grammar (IG), an approach for analysing the design of institutions. To lay the foundation for the application of the “Grammar” for different application areas, the book first provides a background of the IG, before motivating the introduction of an updated version of the Institutional Grammar, called the Institutional Grammar 2.0 that aims at representing institutions more comprehensively and with greater validity. The book then turns to applications and introduces methodological guidance alongside expositions of emerging analytical applications of the “Grammar” that include presentations of current practice, as well as developing novel analytical opportunities that analysts of diverse disciplinary backgrounds and interest can apply or build upon for their application.

Christopher K. Frantz is Associate Professor of Computational Social Science at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Norway. His research focuses on computational approaches to institutional analysis, with specific focus on modelling techniques to facilitate behavioral and structural analyses of institutional arrangements. A conceptual refinement introduced as part of his work is the systematic application of nesting principles, enhancing the Institutional Grammar’s ability to capture institutions ofarbitrary structural complexity.

Saba Siddiki is Associate Professor of Public Administration and International Affairs at Syracuse University, USA. Her research focuses on institutional design, particularly, policy design. She studies the structure/content of policy design and the behavioral and policy implications of policy design. Siddiki has specifically focused on empirically validating the use of the Institutional Grammar for measuring policy-relevant concepts and expanding the syntactic structure upon which the Institutional Grammar is based.


This book provides a comprehensive introduction to the Institutional Grammar, an approach for analyzing the design of institutions. To lay the foundation for the application of the Grammar for different application areas, the book first provides a background of the IG, before motivating the introduction of an updated version of the Institutional Grammar, called the Institutional Grammar 2.0 that aims at representing institutions more comprehensively and with greater validity. The book then turns to applications and introduces methodological guidance alongside expositions of emerging analytical applications of the “Grammar” that include presentations of current practice, as well as developing novel analytical opportunities that the analyst can apply or build upon for their application. This book is aimed at students, faculty, and practitioners of diverse disciplinary backgrounds with varying levels of understanding of institutional analysis and experience conducting it.
Provides a comprehensive introduction to the Institutional Grammar, an approach for analysing the design of institutions Builds on Crawford's and Ostrom's ground breaking work, and provides guidelines for how their framework can be applied Outlines an Institutional Grammar 2.0 to update the field

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Christopher K. Frantz

Themen in »Institutional Grammar«

institutional design institutional analysis policy design governance computational social science

Stimmen zu »Institutional Grammar«

Institutional Grammar is a must read for social scientists and legal scholars who study the complex interplay between institutional arrangements and actors’ behavior, as well as scholars interested in the semantics of institutions. Beginning with a careful exposition of Elinor Ostrom’s Institutional Analysis and Development Framework and its affiliated grammar of institutions (aka IG 1.0), the authors present IG 2.0, identifying how it corrects the shortcomings of IG 1.0, as well as substantively expanding it to allow for the coding of regulative and constitutive institutional statements at different levels of granularity. Importantly, the authors include guidance on how to implement IG 2.0 and analyze the coded data, making the grammar accessible and highlighting its practical value. This book represents the definitive text on the grammar of institutions.” (Edella Schlager, Professor, University of Arizona, USA)

“Frantz and Siddiki summarize the Institutional Grammar 2.0 for the systematic analysis of institutions. In doing so, their book revolutionizes the study of institutions and provides a sturdy foundation for building knowledge about them. This book is without peers, and its impact on the analysis of institutions will stretch across disciplines and extend far into the future.” (Christopher M. Weible, Professor, University of Colorado Denver, USA)

"Institutions are ubiquitous, but can be challenging to study. With their development and description of the Institutional Grammar 2.0, Frantz and Siddiki provide a de-facto open standard for a new field we might call 'Computational Institutional Analysis'. This is a must-read for anyone interested in contributing to this emerging area of social science.” (Charlie Schweik, Professor, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA)

“The institutional grammar is an important and promising framework in institutional analysis that makes it possible to turn policy text into data;a bridge from raw policy texts to formal institutional representation. A collaboration between a policy scholar and computer scientist, Frantz and Siddiki's contributions to the framework are a major advance, and are already being adopted by institutional analysts across disciplines. While this work details the form and use of their technical contributions, it is as much a primer on that work as a roadmap for the future of the technique. Scholars eager to push institutional analysis further than it has ever gone will find no shortage of ideas and opportunities. The field is wide open, and with the guidance of Frantz and Siddiki, the institutional grammaticist is sure to find something new.” (Seth Frey, Assistant Professor, University of California, Davis, USA)

Institutional Grammar represents the end of a long journey that started with the famous paper ‘A Grammar of Institutions’ published in 1995. In this book, the authors provide a much-needed overview of the state of the art in the scholarship and suggest some interesting new developments. One of the main contributions of the book is the discussion of complexity, embedded in the 'grammar'. Although complexity has been a central topic in political economy and political science since the 1980s, the literature has yet to find a comprehensive framework that speaks across disciplines. In this book, scholars will find exactly what they were looking for: a theoretically compelling and empirically valid approach to complexity.” (Matia Vannoni, Lecturer in Public Policy, Department of Political Economy, King's College London, United Kingdom)


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Details

ISBN: 9783030863722
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Erscheinung: 24.02.2022

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