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Path Dependence Analysis

Path dependence analysis explains why history matters by showing how early, sometimes accidental events set in motion self-reinforcing processes that lock in particular institutional or policy trajectories. Drawing on the economics of increasing returns and elaborated for political science by Paul Pierson and for comparative-historical sociology by James Mahoney, the approach holds that once a society starts down a track, the relative costs of reversal rise over time, so that the same initial conditions could have produced very different stable outcomes. Small contingent choices at a formative moment become amplified by positive feedback, learning effects, coordination, adaptive expectations, and sunk investments, until alternatives that were once feasible become prohibitively expensive. The method directs analysts to identify the contingent origin, specify the concrete mechanisms of reproduction, and demonstrate the increasing returns that make a path durable. It thereby converts the loose intuition that the past constrains the present into a disciplined account of temporally ordered, self-reinforcing causation.

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Sources

  1. Pierson, P. (2000). Increasing Returns, Path Dependence, and the Study of Politics. American Political Science Review, 94(2), 251-267. DOI: 10.2307/2586011
  2. Mahoney, J. (2000). Path Dependence in Historical Sociology. Theory and Society, 29(4), 507-548. DOI: 10.1023/A:1007113830879

How to cite this page

ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Path Dependence Analysis (Increasing-Returns Processes). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/historical-institutionalism/path-dependence-analysis

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ScholarGatePath Dependence Analysis (Path Dependence Analysis (Increasing-Returns Processes)). Retrieved 2026-06-24 from https://scholargate.app/en/historical-institutionalism/path-dependence-analysis · Dataset: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026