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American Political Culture. Government and Politics From the State of Nature to Democracy What do Americans Think About Government?. Politics. Harold Lasswell defined politics as the struggle over “who gets what, when and how”. Picasso’s Guernica. Politics.
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American Political Culture • Government and Politics • From the State of Nature to Democracy • What do Americans Think About Government?
Politics • Harold Lasswell defined politics as the struggle over “who gets what, when and how” Picasso’s Guernica
Politics • Another way to think about politics is the conflicts and struggle over the leadership, structure, and policies of government Protestors with Guernica Replica
Pluralism vs. Elitism • Pluralism is the pattern of struggles among numerous interests (factions) over the political process and policy • Elitism is the influence of a single group of elites over the political process and policy
Political Science • Political Science is the study of politics and is generally concerned with three questions • Who Governs? • For What Means? • By What Means?
Government • The institutions and procedures through which a territory and people are ruled • U.S. House of Representatives • United Nations General Assembly
The Functions of Government • Establish and Enforce Rules and Laws • Protect Property Rights • Redistribute Wealth • Create and Maintain Infrastructure • Roads and Highways • Compare food delivery in the Congo to that of the United States
Government • Max Weber, the German sociologist, defined government as that institution in society that has a monopoly over the legitimate use of force • Government must be recognized as legitimate to exercise authority
Legitimacy • Legitimacy is the widespread acceptance of something as necessary, rightful and legally binding • Weber’s Sources of Legitimacy • Charismatic • Traditional • Rational/Legal
Charismatic Legitimacy • Based on personal power of leader, which may be supernatural • King Arthur and Excalibur • Asante Golden Stool
Traditional Legitimacy • Based on history, tradition or custom such as hereditary monarchy Emperor Hirohito Prince Edward
Rational or Legal Legitimacy • Derived from established procedures, principles or laws (i.e., elections) President Bush Welcomes Nobel Prize Winner Al Gore to the White House
Forms of Government • Governments can be classified in a number of ways • Who Governs • How they Govern • Political Ideology
Who Governs • Autocracy • Oligarchy/Aristocracy • Gerontocracy • Kleptocracy • Krytocracy • Meritocracy • Ochlocracy/Mobocracy • Plutocracy • Theocracy • Democracy
Anarchy • Anarchy is the absence of government or the absence of the state • President William McKinley was assassinated by an anarchist in 1901
Autocracy • A government of one • King or Queen • Dictator • Emperor • Pharaoh • William the Conqueror defeated Harold for the crown of England at the Battle of Hastings in 1066
Oligarchy or Aristocracy • Government by a small elite group such as landowners or military officers • The French Revolution overthrew an aristocratic social structure • Similar land reform revolutions took place throughout Latin America • Zapatistas (Mexico) • Mission Zamora (Venezuela)
Gerontocracy • A gerontocracy is a government by elders • The Eight Immortals of Communist China • Deng Xiaoping and the other elders of the Communist Party ruled during the 1980s and 1990s
Kleptocracy • A kleptocracy is a government that steals the nations assets for personal enrichment • Zaire under Mobutu • Indonesia under Suharto • Philippines under Marcos
Krytocracy • Government ruled by judges United States Supreme Court
Meritocracy • Government based on merit or ability such as Plato’s Philosopher Kings • MENSA of Springfield governed based on intelligence
Ochlocracy/Mobocracy • Government by the mob or angry crowd • The mobs fueled the French Revolution • Can the crowd be controlled? • Sigmund Freud • Le Bon The Crowd • Serge Moscovici
Plutocracy • Government by the wealthy Money has always played an important role in U.S. politics
Theocracy • A theocracy is a government by religious leaders • Tibet in Exile • Iran • Afghanistan
Democracy • A government in which political power is vested in the people • Direct democracy provides for decision making by the people • Representative democracy provides for representatives chosen by the people
Representative Democracy • Today, most nation-states operate under the concept of representative democracy • Individuals are elected by the citizens to represent them in the affairs of civil society British House of Commons
Types of Elections in a Representative Democracy • National • Primaries and Runoffs • General Election • State and Local • Primaries and Runoffs • General Election • Recall Polish Solidarity Election Poster
2003 California Recall Election • Governor Gray Davis of California was recalled as Governor • Arnold Schwarzenegger defeated 135 candidates • Gary Coleman finished 8th • Porn star Mary Carey finished 10th
Types of Elections in a Direct Democracy • Initiatives • Referendums • Constitutional Amendments • Texas • Colorado • New England Town Hall Meetings
How Do Governments Govern? Constitutional versus Totalitarian
Totalitarian Government • Totalitarian governments are free from legal limits and seek to eliminate those organized social groups that might challenge or limit the governments authority • Soviet Union • Nazi Germany
Authoritarianism • Authoritarianism is the psychological “profile” that supports totalitarian political systems • Adorno, et al developed the F-Scale after WWII • Milgram Experiment • Stanford Prison Guard Experiment
1984 • George Orwell’s novel depicts the totalitarian state • Big Brother • Thought Police • Thought Crime
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn • The power of the police state is vividly described in The Gulag Archipelago and One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
Constitutional Government • Constitutional governments are limited as to what they are permitted to control (substantive) as well as how they go about it (procedural)
The Politics of Ideology • Governments are also classified based on the role government is expected to play in society • Left versus Right • Two Dimensional • Three Dimensional
The Politics of Ideology • The Left • Communism (Marx, Lenin, Stalin, Mao, Castro, Che) • Soviet Union • China • Cuba • Social Democracy • Sweden • Norway • Germany
The Politics of Ideology • The Center • Classical Liberalism • David Hume • Simon Bolivar • Conservatism • Edmund Burke
The Politics of Ideology • The Right • Fascism • Nazi Germany • Mussolini’s Italy • Peron’s Argentina • Franco’s Spain???
Evolution of Government • Hobbes and Locke both contend that man began in the state of nature and were absolutely free • Hobbes notes that during this period man was in a “condition called war; and such war as is of every man against every man”
Lord of Flies • William Golding’s Lord of the Flies depicts school boys being thrust into the state of nature and their attempts to form civil society “Poor Piggy”
Robert Filmer’s Patriarcha • The first Kings were the fathers of their families as Adam was lord over his family • This lordship which Adam by creation had over the whole world, and by right descending from him the patriarchs did enjoy, was as large and ample as the absolutist dominion of any monarch which hath been since the creation.
The Evolution of Government • Families and Clans • Tribes and Villages • Cities/City-States • Empires • Nation-States
The Unification of England • Alfred the Great began the unification of England • Alfred’s son Edward the Elder becomes first King of England in 899
The Norman Invasion • William the Conqueror defeats Harold at the Battle of Hastings in 1066
The Normans and Feudalism • Feudalism was essentially a pyramid scheme in which military support was exchange for land and titles
Feudal Japan • Japan also developed a feudal society out of which the legend of the Samurai was born