Genre, which is described as the categories of written texts that have recognizable patterns, is a commonality amongst the social science field. Although the social sciences are oftentimes grouped together on a holistic level, it’s important to analyze the differences in formatting and information that separate the subfields from one another. The most pragmatic way of doing this would be to directly compare two of the subheadings under the social science field, in this particular context the similarities and differences between the economics and political science genre writing styles will be juxtaposed. Whilst the economics article published in the Oxford Economic Papers entitled Global food prices and domestic inflation: some cross-country evidence (2016) by …show more content…
Wachter depicts the impact of global food price shocks on domestic inflation in a large group of countries, the political science article Mobilizing the Public Against the President: Congress and the Political Costs of Unilateral Action which was published by the American Journal of Political Science (AJPS) in 2015 by Dino P. Christenson and Douglas L. Kriner B deliniates a series of experiments that demonstrate Congress’s ability to erode support for unilateral actions by raising both constitutional and policy-based objections to the exercise of unilateral power. In this paper I’ll be presenting the ways in which the writing styles of these two subgenres within the social sciences are alike, and how they are dissimilar.
Generally speaking, the economic and political science realms are uniform in the fact that they both have similar formatting, layout, organization, visual elements/setup. For starters,