The Legitimation of Power |
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Page 21
... society . Is power valid according to the rules ? The relevant rules have to be specified , their conventional or legal form established , the mode of adjudication pertinent to the given society determined , and so on . Are the rules ...
... society . Is power valid according to the rules ? The relevant rules have to be specified , their conventional or legal form established , the mode of adjudication pertinent to the given society determined , and so on . Are the rules ...
Page 74
... society . Of these there are two major variants capable of providing a source of legitimacy : society in the past ( tradition ) and society in the present ( the people ) . The first derives the rules of power from the society's own past ...
... society . Of these there are two major variants capable of providing a source of legitimacy : society in the past ( tradition ) and society in the present ( the people ) . The first derives the rules of power from the society's own past ...
Page 75
... society's rules of power : from religious to secular ; from external and universalistic to internal and par- ticularistic ; from society as past , to society as its people in the present . Such shifts in belief , as gradual as they are ...
... society's rules of power : from religious to secular ; from external and universalistic to internal and par- ticularistic ; from society as past , to society as its people in the present . Such shifts in belief , as gradual as they are ...
Contents
Power and its Need of Legitimation | 42 |
The Normative Structure of Legitimacy | 63 |
Legitimacy through expressed consent | 90 |
Copyright | |
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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