This article addresses the relative neglect of Territory and Powerin informing the study of general state political development, both as a theoretical approach and in its application to the UK. It locates Territory and Poweras a distinct contribution to two major schools of comparative research. The first section argues that Territory and Powerprovided an approach that was part of the intellectual turn during the 1980s to bring the state back into the analysis of politics. The second part argues that Territory and Powershould be seen also as a contribution to the intellectual turn since the 1980s towards temporal analysis of political development. On these bases future researchers may find Territory and Powermore accessible as a work that they can incorporate in their own research.
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