Title: Lane, Ch. 4: Comparative Politics Reconsiders the State.
1Lane, Ch. 4 Comparative Politics Reconsiders the
State.
2South East Asia...
- The explosive economic growth in South East Asia
at the beginning of the 1980s was considered by
most scholars the demise of the dependency
theory. - Argument dependency theory cannot explain such a
process of growth
Who or what can explain it instead?
3 4- Dependency theorists showed the decisive role of
the State in the expansion of capital and
industrialization - The State always somehow intervenes
- Development is neither natural nor spontaneous
(State regulation)
5Dependency Theory leads to the State
6Dependency theorists Cardoso Faletto identified
three main strategies to break the vicious circle
of dependency(target the State)
- Guerrilla movements organized against military
dictatorships (ex Argentina 1969-1975) - The Democratic Path Salvador Allendes
government (1970-1973) - Military Reformism (ex Perú)
- Importance of politics.
7Cardoso Faletto The possibility of
alternatives depends upon the resolution of this
question of the state.
8Main Paths
- Followers of dependency theory proposed to break
bonds with the center. - Critics of dependency see the State instead as an
instrument to overcome underdevelopment WITHIN
the system (ex Evans)
9The State
- Behavioralists dissolved the State in a
multiplicity of agencies and institutions, or
presented it as a black box (structural-function
alism). - Developmentalists referred to the State as if we
all knew exactly what it is and how it works. - (Many) Dependency Theorists presented the state
as subordinate to the flows of capital
10Lane New (?) Debate
- issue of whether the state was merely the
executive committee of the capitalist class,
doing its will, or whether the state had some
degree of independence from forces in the
surrounding society. (80)
11New consensus Politics is not a mere
reflection of economics.
- Structuralism of Marxian and Weberian roots
-
- Marx the State is an instrument of domination of
the ruling classes. - Weber the State is fundamentally a bureaucracy
which develops according to an internal logic
12Bringing the State Back In (1985)
- Back In?
- Actually, comparative politics had not focused on
the study of the State before. - It is one thing to argue that a deeper study of
the state is needed, however, and quite another
to know in what terms or concepts the state is to
be studied. (Lane, 80) - Hegels ghost (State Universal, Progressive
force)
13Main Approaches.
- ODonnells Bureaucratic Authoritarian State.
- Theda Skocpols autonomy of the State.
- Evans emphasis on the entrepeneurial aspects of
the State. - The centrality of the State in Transitions to
Democracy (Schmitter ODonnell, Linz Stepan) - The Postmodern Critique the State as a
metaphysical effect of social practices
(Mitchell).
14Guillermo ODonnell the Bureaucratic-Authoritaria
n State.
- Context countries of the Southern Cone (Brazil,
Argentina, Uruguay, and Chile) during the 1960s
and the 1970s. Then also Greece, Mexico and
Spain. - Mistake of previous theories (developmentalism)
assuming that the future of all political
systems was inevitably, if not immediately,
something resembling Anglo-Saxon democracy. (4) - Bureaucratic-authoritarian pattern of state
domination associated to a particular form of
(dependent) capitalist development. (p.5)
15ODonnell the characteristics of the BA are...
- High governmental positions are performed by
private and public bureaucrats - Political exclusion (closing channels to the
political participation of the popular sectors) - Economic exclusion (of the popular sector)
- Depoliticization (political problems are
transformed into technical issues) - Important transformation in the mechanisms of
capital accumulation (increasing
transnationalization and dependency)
16The BA emerged in...
- Highly modernized and industrialized societies
that were far from traditional. - Urban
- Large industrial working class
- Modern (and transnationalized) industries
(corporations favored by desarrollista
governments) - But... There are limits of growth proper of
peripheral and dependent settings. - Crises (of economic growth and inclusion)
- Mobilization of the popular sectors
- Repression by the state (alliance of modern state
bureaucrats, corporations, and businessmen/middle-
classes related to corporations). Military coups
(ex Chile in 1973)
17ODonnell Origins of the BA
- The BA state is... A reaction to extended
political activation of the urban popular sector
(p. 6) (popular sector industrial working class
a part of the middle class). - The dominant sectors feel threatened by the
popular sectors political participation. - The greater the threat level, the greater the
polarization and visibility of the class content
of the conflicts that precede the implantation of
the BA. (7)
18Skocpol, States and Social Revolutions.
- Social revolutions are rapid, basic
transformations of a societys state and class
structures and they are accompanied and in part
carried through by class-based revolts from
below. (...) What is unique to social revolutions
is that basic changes in social structure and in
political structure occur together in a mutually
reinforcing fashion. (4-5)
19Skocpol, States and Social Revolutions
- Problem Social-scientific theories derived
their explanations of revolution from models of
how political protest and change were ideally
supposed to occur in liberal-democratic or
capitalist societies. (xiii) - (both Marxist theories and theories of
modernization)
20Skocpol
- Problem to explain revolutions occurred in
predominantly agrarian countries with
absolutist-monarchical states and peasant-based
social orders. (xiv) - French Revolution (1789)
- Russian (Soviet) Revolution (1917)
- Chinese Revolution (1911-16)
- All of these revolutions occurred in Imperial,
proto-bureaucratic states (Bourbon France,
Romanov Russia, Manchu China)
21Skocpol, States and Social Revolutions
- We can make sense of social-revolutionary
transformations only if we take the state
seriously as a macro-structure. The state
properly conceived is no mere arena in which
socioeconomic struggles are fought out. It is,
rather, a set of administrative, policing, and
military organizations headed, and more or less
well coordinated by, an executive authority. Any
state first and fundamentally extracts resources
from society and deploys these to create and
support coercive and administrative
organizations. (29)
22Skocpol
- Where they exist, these fundamental state
organizations are at least potentially autonomous
from direct dominant-class control. The extent to
which they actually are autonomous, and to what
effect, varies from case to case. (29-30)
23Problem What is the State?Where does it begin,
and where does it end?How should we study the
State empirically? (unit/s of analysis,
variables?)?Dissolution