Karolinum Press, Charles University
Famous but Misunderstood
Three Essays on Maurice Duverger’s Political Science
Distributed for Karolinum Press, Charles University
Famous but Misunderstood
Three Essays on Maurice Duverger’s Political Science
A major reassessment of the work of the canonical political theorist Maurice Duverger.
Widely cited but increasingly seldom read, Maurice Duverger (1917–2014) exemplifies the fate of many canonical thinkers in political science. Famous but Misunderstood revisits his legacy through a comprehensive analysis of three interconnected pillars of his work: the formulation of Duverger’s laws concerning the relationship between electoral systems and party systems; his typology of pluralist party systems; and his empirical theories of democracy. Duverger’s ideas are examined in close comparison with the later and highly influential contributions of Giovanni Sartori (1924–2017) and Arend Lijphart (*1936), highlighting both continuities and divergences.
Authored by political scientist Miroslav Novák, recipient of the 2024 Czech Political Science Association Award for his contribution to the development of Czech political science, the book persuasively argues that contemporary scholarship has significantly misunderstood Duverger’s work. In doing so, it calls for a reassessment not only of Duverger’s theories but also of prevailing narratives about the evolution of political science in the second half of the twentieth century.
162 pages | 1 halftone, 2 tables | 4.92 x 8.07 | © 2026
History: History of Ideas
Political Science: Comparative Politics, Political and Social Theory
Table of Contents
Part One – Duverger’s so-called “sociological laws”: Their gradual formulation and their methodological aspects
Part Two – Competitive party systems: Where do Duverger and Sartori diverge?
Part Three – From the typology of party systems to the typology of democracies: Duverger, Sartori and Lijphart
Summary
References
Index of Names