The Legitimation of Power |
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Page 91
... legit- imacy ? If the last of these , then again what sort of evidence will count ? Most of these problems disappear once we free ourselves of the mistaken view that legitimacy is to be equated with people's belief in it . Then we are ...
... legit- imacy ? If the last of these , then again what sort of evidence will count ? Most of these problems disappear once we free ourselves of the mistaken view that legitimacy is to be equated with people's belief in it . Then we are ...
Page 98
... legit- imate without being legitimated , since the subordinate belonged to the category of the unfree , and were hence unqualified to give consent ( though in the case of serfdom the fiction was observed that consent to subordination ...
... legit- imate without being legitimated , since the subordinate belonged to the category of the unfree , and were hence unqualified to give consent ( though in the case of serfdom the fiction was observed that consent to subordination ...
Page 119
... legit- imate systems would be resolved by a routine change of govern- ment or its personnel - develops into a crisis of the regime itself . This happens because of the low tolerance level of the popu- lation , and because manifestations ...
... legit- imate systems would be resolved by a routine change of govern- ment or its personnel - develops into a crisis of the regime itself . This happens because of the low tolerance level of the popu- lation , and because manifestations ...
Contents
Power and its Need of Legitimation | 42 |
The Normative Structure of Legitimacy | 63 |
Legitimacy through expressed consent | 90 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
activities analysis argued basic basis belief in legitimacy capitalist chapter claim coercion communist competition constitutional rules contemporary context coup coup d'état crisis criteria definition delegitimation democratic demonstrated depends derive distinction division of labour dominance and subordination economic effective electoral choice electoral mode erosion expressed consent force gender historical idea imacy institutions interests involved Iran Iranian revolution Islamic justified legal validity legit legitimation legitimation crisis liberal democracy limited Marxism-Leninism means of power ment meritocratic mobilisation moral necessary normative normative philosophy organisation particular party political legitimacy political order political philosophy political system popular sovereignty position power relations power relationship power rules principle of popular problems production purposes realised requires revolution revolutionary role rules of power Saudi Arabia secure social scientist social transformation society source of authority sphere structure system of power theory traditional types typically undermine vulnerable