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MAX WEBER

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Title: MAX WEBER


1
MAX WEBER
  • Authority
  • Bureaucracy

2
The Leaders!
3
What they have in common?
  • They (Jesus, a professor or a scientists, a Queen
    or King, slave traders) are leaders in the sense
    that they issue commands and others follow their
    commands.

4
Power and Authority
  • Only in the extreme case of slavery there is no
    free compliance. (Power)
  • Commands are obeyed by a certain group out of
    voluntary compliance. (Authority)

5
Interest in Obedience
  • voluntary compliance implies that people obey
    because they have some sort of interest in
    obedience.

6
These interests may include
  1. material interest (salary, economic status, etc.)
  2. custom

7
A reliable social order
  • These two factors (material Interests and
    Custom), do not, even taken together, form a
    sufficiently reliable basis for a social order.

8
The belief in legitimacy
  • This is the additional and decisive factor
  • people find the given commands (laws, policies)
    to be valid.

9
Validity of commands
  • they constitute the basis of action for its own
    sake (not for self interest or other
    consequences).

10
Three types of legitimate authority
  • Based on their validity
  • 1. Traditional
  • 2. Legal-Rational
  • 3. Charismatic

11
1. Traditional Authority
  • For example the Queen was the supreme authority
    in both England and Canada

12
Traditional grounds
  • belief in the sanctity of traditions
  • Basis of the legitimacy of traditional authority.

13
The Ruler
  • Designated according to traditionally transmitted
    rules
  • (such as kings and queens designated according to
    the royal kinship).

14
The object of obedience
  • The personal authority of the individual
  • What is obeyed is the person in authority

15
The Ruled
  • subjects
  • follow the person in the authority status

16
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17
2. Legal-Rational Authority
  • For example the authority of the Prime Minister
    in Canada or of the professors at the university.
  • They are elected or appointed on the basis of
    the legally established rules.

18
The Basis of legitimacy Legality
  • a belief in the 'legality' of enacted rules

19
The Basis of legitimacy Rationality
  • enacted through rational discussion and
    deliberation and thus subject to change
  • Consistent and logical (not contradictory and
    conflicting laws)

20
An example Parents
  • Traditional
  • When parents say because I said so!
  • They rely on the traditional idea of parental
    authority

21
Legal-rational model of parenting
  • parents negotiate the rules with children and let
    the rules and not merely the parental authority
    govern parent-child relationship

22
The rules
  • a consistent system of law rationally enacted
  • Constitution ? laws (parliament ? government,
    et.)

23
The ruler
  • Is subject to an impersonal order (the rule of
    law where the ruler is not beyond the law)

24
The Rule of Law
  • in free countries the law ought to be king and
    there ought to be no other.
  • It is on the basis of these rules or procedures
    that those elevated to authority attain the
    right to issue commands.

25
The ruled
  • a member of the group
  • Equal Status
  • (Citizens and not subjects, disciples or
    follower.)
  • owe the obedience not to the person in authority
    as an individual, but to the impersonal order.

26
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27
3. Charismatic Authority
  • For example the historical figures such as
    Gandhi, Lenin, Khomeini, or famous actors,
    singers etc.
  • Their followers believed they had exceptional
    and extraordinary qualities and thus obey the
    orders given by them.

28
Devotion to the charismatic Leader (emotional)
The commands and orders are obeyed
Belief in the exceptional and extraordinary
qualities of the leader (charisma)
29
Bureaucracy
  • The purest type of exercise of legal rational
    authority

30
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31
Technocracy
  • Domination on the basis of technical
    qualifications and the greatest possible length
    of technical training.

32
A spirit of formalistic impersonality
  • without hatred or passion, and hence without
    affection or enthusiasm and without purely
    personal, irrational, and emotional elements
    which escape calculation.

33
The machine work
  • depends on its impersonality.
  • Because it eliminates the essential aspects of
    humanity, bureaucracy is dehumanizing .

34
Efficiency
  • Bureaucracy is the most efficient form of
    organizing the public affairs.

35
The Files
  • The management of the modern office is based upon
    written documents ('the files').
  • Impersonal independent of the persons working in
    the office (e.g. independent of personal oral
    communication in issuing policies, plans, etc.)

36
The Centrality of Bureaucracy
  • The expansion of Bureaucratization was linked to
    the following four factors

37
1. The expansion of Nation- State
  • Into new areas of welfare provision and economic
    regulation

38
2. The capitalist enterprises
  • The growing employment of clerical,
    technical and managerial personnel within the
    capitalist enterprises

39
3. Democratization
40
4. rationalization
41
The Dialectic OF BUREAUCRACY
  • Bureaucracy creates conflicting tendencies by
    promoting and at the same time restricting
  • Individual freedom
  • Democracy

42
1. Individual Freedom
  • Promotes personal freedom
  • People are freed from
  • the old forms of personal relations and ties of
    loyalty (kinship, gender, race)
  • property and other external considerations (the
    class)
  • Restricts individual freedom
  • 1. The size of organizations beyond the reach of
    individual.
  • 2. Eliminates individuals chance to act out of
    their conviction and Passion

43
2. Democracy
  • Promotes Democracy
  • Breaking down traditional privilege and
    patrimonial domination (as explained above).
  • Restricts Democracy
  • due to the power of experts (the appointed
    bureaucrats) to obstruct the power of the head of
    the bureaucracy (i.e. the democratically elected
    prime ministers, premiers, et.)

44
The Leadership Challenge
  • Todays entrepreneur or political leader
  • Follow the logic of possible means over the
    assertion of ends
  • Ideal entrepreneur or political leader
  • the innovative, risk-taking who acts with passion
    and conviction.

45
Bureaucracy is indestructible!
  • Because of its
  • ability to coordinate action over a large area,
  • continuity of operation,
  • monopoly of expertise and control of the files,
  • internal social cohesion and morale.

46
The socialist illusion
  • The Marxist belief that the overthrow of
    capitalism would inaugurate the classless society

47
Socialism an enormous bureaucracy
  • This is caused by
  • 1. The state ownership of the means of production
    and Planned Economy

48
  • 2. The extension of equal citizenship
  • citizens in socialist systems expect the
    government to provide employment, health care,
    education, housing, etc.

49
3. The loss of pluralism
  • The countervailing power structures that existed
    within capitalist society, in particular that of
    private capitalism itself, would be removed.

50
  • Webers prediction that the revolution had thrown
    up a new bureaucratic ruling class, coordinated
    and disciplined by the institution of the
    Communist Party soon became a commonplace.
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