Political Economy

Chapter 17 and 18: Sociology, Schaefer, 1995-2010

Power and Property

Property:

Ownership:

Economic Systems:

Communal Ownership:

Private Ownership:

Public (state) Ownership:

Convergence:

Division of Labor and the Structure of Occupations.

G.B. Shaw: Professions as a conspiracy

Control and Organization of Property ==>Power.

See also: Theoretical Models in Political Sociology by Ted Goertzel (professor in the Sociology Department at Rutgers University) for a thorough review of classic theories that are still relevant today.

R. Bierstadt: "On Power"

The State vs. Government==> Political Order (social organization of power)

Authority: Position (Status) within the Social Structure

(see also, http://www.faculty.rsu.edu/~felwell/Theorists/Weber/Whome.htm#Authority)

Weber: Types


Monty Python and the Holy Grail: Traditional versus Legal Rational Authority
[transcript]

The Role of the State

Functions of the State:

Conflict:

Forms of the State:

Political Processes

The Distribution of Power and Control

Power Elite and Ruling Class Models

C. Wright Mills:

  1. Power Elite (an alternative view)
  2. Relatively independent groups: Political, Corporate, and Military.
  3. They Rule.

POWER ELITE

 

Interest group leaders, legislators, P.O. leaders

Unorganized, exploited masses

Domhoff: Ruling Class (pdf) (Ruling Class local copy)

  1. 1% of population, owners of income producing property
  2. 13% of income
  3. 30% of wealth
  4. Not conspiracy, individuals, networks, interlocking boards, schools, recreation, etc.
  5. Act in own interest, influence political processes, etc.
  6. Dahl (below)
    1. Failed to trace how local elites are networked to others at the national level
    2. Domhoff demonstrates integrated network of local elites that seemingly constitute national control group
  7. Research on Power

Pluralism

David Riesman (see also: The Lonely Crowd):

  1. Veto Groups: Interest groups that have the ability to prevent the exercise of power by others, keep debate open.
  2. Union, Professions, Social movements, etc.
  3. Political leaders forced to work with these groups

Robert Dahl:

  1. From oligarchy to pluralism (excerpt from Who Governs? Democracy and Power in an American City (1961) on questa.com)(the book on google books)
  2. New Haven--Few "Decision Makers"
  3. But--community power-diffuse, variety of interests and participation in decision making based on specific concerns.

Conclusions:

  1. Question whether many issues ever reach the arena of public debate.
  2. Local and national elites set the agenda, determine the "playing rules," and referee the game.
  3. Outcome always benefits their interests.
  4. Overall--power is unequally distributed.
  5. The Internet: Cyberactivism and the power of immediate access.
  6. Capitalist network that runs the world (October 2011)

Health and Health Care

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Owner: Robert O. Keel rok@umsl.edu
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Last Updated: Wednesday, April 18, 2018 10:01 AM