ArcherM. (1995) Realist Social Theory: The Morphogenetic Approach (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).
2.
CumminsR. (1975) ‘Functional Analysis’, Journal of Philosophy, 72: 741–764.
3.
DowdingK. (2000) ‘How not to use Evolutionary Theory in Politics: a Critique of Peter John’, British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 2:1, 72–80.
4.
DowdingK. (2001) ‘There Must be an End to Confusion: Policy Networks, Intellectual Fatigue and the Need for Political Science Methods Courses in British Universities’, Political Studies, 49, 89–105.
5.
HempelC. G. (1965) Aspects of Scientific Explanation (New York: Free Press).
6.
JohnP. (1999) ‘Ideas and Interests; Agendas and Implementation: an Evolutionary Explanation of Policy Change in British Local Government Finance’, British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 1:1, 39–62.
7.
KerrP. (2001) Postwar British Politics: From Conflict to Consensus (London: Routledge/PSA).
8.
KerrP. (2002) ‘Saved From Extinction: Evolutionary Theorising, Politics and the State’, British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 4:2, 330–358.
9.
McConnellA. (2000) ‘Local Taxation, Policy Formation and Policy Change: A Reply to Peter John’, British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 2:1, 81–88.
10.
MarshD.SmithM. (2000) ‘Understanding Policy Networks: Towards a Dialectical Approach’, Political Studies, 48, 4–21.
11.
MarshD.SmithM. (2001) ‘There is More than One Way to Do Political Science: On Different Ways to Study Policy Networks’, Political Studies, 49, 528–541.
12.
NagelE. (1961) The Structure of Science (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul).
13.
NelsonR. R.WinterS. G. (1982) An Evolutionary Theory of Economic Change (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press).
14.
WardH. (1989) ‘Evolution and Regulation: Economism Rediscovered’, Essex Papers in Politics and Government, No. 64.
15.
WardH. (1997) ‘The Possibility of an Evolutionary Explanation of the State's Role in Modes of Regulation’, in StanyerJ.StokerG. (eds), Contemporary Political Studies, Vol. 1 (Exeter: PSA).