The Legitimation of Power |
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Page 48
... production or subsistence and the means of physical force obviously differ in the way they operate as agencies of power . The means of physical force give those who possess them the ability to obstruct , constrain , hurt , harm or ...
... production or subsistence and the means of physical force obviously differ in the way they operate as agencies of power . The means of physical force give those who possess them the ability to obstruct , constrain , hurt , harm or ...
Page 54
... production , and this in turn has depended on whether production has been organised within the domestic economy or outside it . The same process that ' freed ' the worker from the soil in modern Europe , and created wage labour , also ...
... production , and this in turn has depended on whether production has been organised within the domestic economy or outside it . The same process that ' freed ' the worker from the soil in modern Europe , and created wage labour , also ...
Page 166
... production and the private appropriation and use of the prod- uct – simply put , the essentially public activity of production is dependent upon private ownership and private initiative , so that , for example , decisions about the ...
... production and the private appropriation and use of the prod- uct – simply put , the essentially public activity of production is dependent upon private ownership and private initiative , so that , for example , decisions about the ...
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