Title: Introduction to Politics: A Western Perspective
1Introduction to PoliticsA Western Perspective
- RONALD CHAN
- Savantas Political Academy
- Saturday, March 21, 2009
2Politics as the art of government
- Broad definition activities or social relations
involving authority or power - Classical definition the art of government and
activities of the state - Polis (Greek) city-state
3Politics as societal consensus (1)
- Conduct and management of the communitys affairs
(vs. private concerns of the individual) - Aristotle (384-322BC) only within a political
community can human beings live the good life - ???????????,?????,??????,??????
4Politics as societal consensus (2)
- Conflict resolution
- Compromise
- Conciliation
- Negotiation
- Political solutions vs. military solutions
- No politics without diversity of humankind and
scarcity of resources
5Politics as societal conflicts
- Structural inequalities and injustices associated
with production, distribution and use of
resources - Karl Marx (1818-1883) political power as merely
the organized power of one class for oppressing
another - Feminist Kate Millett (1970) politics as
power-structured relationships, arrangements
whereby one group of persons is controlled by
another
6Constitution
Executive
Judiciary
Government
Legislative
Public Private
Political Parties
Civil Society
Individuals Families Market
Social Base
Attitudes Culture Values
A liberal democratic society
7Liberalism
- Meta-ideology in the West
- Commitment to the individual human beings are
endowed with the faculty for reason and should
enjoy the maximum possible freedom - the right over the good
- Characterized by diversity and pluralism
- Linked with laissez-faire capitalism
- Contrast with Confucianism
8Democracy
- Rule by the demos (i.e. people-power)
- Connotation of mob rule well into 19th cent.
- Direct vs. representative democracy
- Seymour Lipset
- a political system with regular constitutional
opportunities for changing the governing
officials a social mechanism permitting the
largest possible part of the population to
influence major decisions by choosing among
contenders for political offices
9Democratic ideals
- Political equality (of the people)
- Popular participation (by the people)
- Public interest (for the people)
- Representative as delegate vs. trustee
- Edmund Burke
- Your representative owes you, not his industry
only, but his judgment and he betrays instead of
serving you if he sacrifices it to your opinion.
10Democratic reality
Elite
Masses
Elite
Elite
Masses
Masses
Elite
Masses
Robert Dahl democracy as polyarchy
11Features of a liberal democracy
- Constitutional government
- Guaranteed civil rights and civil liberties
- Institutional fragmentation
- Free, fair, regular, competitive elections open
to all adults - Civil society
- Capitalism
12Government centerpiece of politics
- Mechanism / organization through which ordered
rule is maintained - Ability to make collective decisions and capacity
to enforce them - Provision of stability, economic and social
well-being of citizens - Early governments
- Sumer 5200 BC
- Ancient Egypt 3000 BC
- Yellow River Civilization 2000 BC
13Source of government power
- Social contract theory
- Unending civil war in state of nature
- Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) solitary, poor, nasty,
brutish and short - People willingly sacrifice a portion of personal
freedom to create a sovereign body ensuring
orderly and stable existence - Obedience to the government as the only safeguard
against chaos - (Anarchism)
14Legitimacy from power to authority
- Max Weber 3 sources of legitimacy
- Charismatic authority
- Theocracy, plutocracy, dictatorship
- Traditional authority
- Monarchy
- Legal-rational authority
- Democracy (mandate)
- Larry Diamond reciprocal relations between
legitimacy and performance
15Classifying governments
HIGH
Statist
Socialist
State Ownership
Laissez-Faire
Welfare State
HIGH
LOW
Welfare Benefits
16Political parties features
- Seek to exercise government power by winning
elections to public offices - Formal membership
- Broad issue focus (vs. single issue focus)
- Shared political preferences and general
ideological identity
17Political parties functions
- Representation and integration
- Interest aggregation melding separate interests
into general demands - Political socialization and training grounds
- Mobilization of voters
- Organization of government
- Presidential vs. parliamentary systems
- Separation of powers
18Political parties party system
- One-party system
- Fused party-state apparatus
- Dominant-party system
- Japan, India, Mexico
- Two-party system
- Ruling party vs. opposition as govt. in waiting
- Two-plus party system
- Multiparty system
- Forming of electoral alliance or coalitions
19Civil society
- Arena of voluntary collective action around
shared interests, purposes, values (vs.
government, market, family) - Independent from govt., political machines
- Charities, NGOs
- Community organizations, interest groups
- Religious groups
- Trade unions, professional associations
- Media
- Think tanks, civic organizations
20Civil society
- Make demands on government
- Check on govt. power, greater accountability
- Essential for government responsiveness
- Almond and Verba vital to democracy
- Enhance awareness, more informed citizenry
- Better voting choices
- Robert Putnam creation of social capital
- Build trust, reciprocity through social network
- Facilitate societal cohesion, moderation,
tolerance, respect for opposing viewpoints
21Political culture
- Political culture
- Set of values, beliefs, attitudes within which a
political system operates - Political practices and rituals of a community
- Edmund Burke morality, custom, tradition as
basis of political stability - Progress in the context of continuity
- No displacement of long-standing institutions
owing to abstract theorizing
22Weber culture underpins progress
Stability of political system
Political behavior
Political culture (transmitted to individuals by
political socialization)
(Contrast Hegel spiritual Marx economic)
23Political culture
- Gabriel Almond and Sidney Verbas The Civic
Culture - Parochial
- Subject
- Participant
- Each type alone unsatisfactory as cultural
underpinnings for stability of a democracy
24Political culture
- Civic culture an optimum mix of subject and
participant attitudes is best - Citizens with knowledge of political process and
sense of empowerment as political actors - Recognition and legitimacy of elites
- Sensitivity to the peoples preferences
- The US and particularly the UK come close to this
ideal