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PART VI: LOOKING FORWARD FOUNDATIONS OF POL. SOC. DEMOCRACY NATION STATE AND ITS CHALLENGERS CAPITALISM THE BIG PICTURE: GLOBAL PROCESSES Use it as Intellectual Self-Defense • Note that “folk sociology” exists all around us. Daily, we are bombarded by implicit theories of politics and society from parents, friends, teachers, priests, politicians, advertisers, etc. Consider some examples: • Many parents: “Return on investment” from Harvard education. • Bernie Sanders: “We should be like Sweden, Denmark, Norway.“ • Botox cosmetics ad: “It’s all about freedom of expression.” • FT Op-Ed: “TPP is nothing but good for us.” First Thing’s Last: Returning to Old Questions Every view of politics presupposes a certain view of society (implicit or explicit). It may be helpful to think of metaphors. Is society like a well-oiled machine? Is society a broken machine about to explode? Is society a network, like a spider’s web? Is society like a functional organism? Is society like a dysfunctional organism, out of equilibrium? Is society like a chaotic jungle? Any analysis of the political sphere depends on the assumptions and limitations that come with the presupposed view of society. Change vs. Continuity One such assumption – perhaps the single most important one – about society is about its dynamism. Are we primarily interested in things changing? Or, are we primarily interested in things staying the same? e.g. think of A. GIDDENS vs. D. HARVEY on globalization. Conflict vs. Harmony Another such assumption is about social order. • Are we considering society as a harmonious, stable equilibrium? • Are we considering society as disorderly and crisis-ridden? e.g. think of WORLD SYSTEMS vs. WORLD POLITY approach to our global society. Marxian Weberian Durkheimian Simmelian Class. Individuals. Society as a whole. – social systems. Social form, not content. Capitalism Nation-State Democracy (particularly: value consensus) Network Dominant “Sphere” Emphasized Economic It varies! (e.g. class/status/party) Cultural Social Selected Readings in the Tradition Burawoy Fox Piven & Cloward Mills Chase-Dunn & Hall Harvey Mann Jasper & Goodwin Evans Esping-Anderson Sassen Anderson Merton Parsons Hays Lareau Wimmer & Feinstein Domhoff Torfason & Ingram Meyer et al. Giddens Change, disruption. Both – but contextualized and contingent. Continuity, preservation. Change proceeds within limits of preexisting social forms. Conflict, tension, inequality. Both – domination is inherent to any harmonious political order. Harmony, stability, equilibrium. Wrong question! Conflict is formally “social” and “cooperative.” Unit of Analysis Key Feature of Modern Politics Change or Continuity? Conflict or Harmony? THEORY EMPRICIAL WORLD Political Sociology is a delicate balancing act between two extremes: - On the one hand, grand, macrotheorizing (what is sometimes called “metatheory”); it aims at broad generalization across time and space, and tends to talk about vast social systems abstractly. - On the other hand, concrete, time-and-spacebound, particularities; instead of generalizing temporally or spatially, here the focus is on history and contingency. Somewhere between triviality and broad generalization; between banality and totalizing nonsense. The “empirical” and the “theoretical” in constant dialogue. Ted The field’s great diversity of theoretical arguments is a sign of its health, stimulating vigorous debate and self examination. Our own assessment is that rational choice theory, on the one hand, and the cultural turn, on the other, can together enrich political sociological theory, indeed enrich theories beyond themselves. Some authors have already pointed to areas where bridging may occur and where fruitful borrowing can develop. […] In some fashion, all the handbook chapters, theoretical and substantive, grapple with theoretical tensions and suggest pathways for a vibrant political sociology in the new millennium. (Jaoski et al. 30-31). Their push for a consolation factor between established political sociologists illustrates how seemingly conflicting positions can result in more nuanced explanations of complex phenomena that political sociologists aim to explain. It brings to my mind the role of political sociology in explaining economic actions. Where it seems that two differing positions exists—one that argues for rational choice theory as a primary explanation for action, and one that argues the role of culture is often overlooked—political sociologists can look at these two extremes to see identify other potential explanations that can encompass both, such as an institutionalist approach—one that sees both the importance of individual agency as well as structural explanatory factors resulting in certain economic actions. Between a Rock and a Hard Place Kirsi This reading discussed “middle-range theories and mechanisms,” saying that these things would help sociologists begin “understanding political processes, sensitive to historical and institutional particularity” (28). Could you give an example of a middle-range theory or mechanism, because I had a hard time identifying one in the reading. Also, I had a hard time identifying how political sociology differed from political science. The excerpt from the handbook wasn’t trying to address the difference, but could we talk about it? Mechanisms, Constraints, Contexts Initial Condition SOCIAL Outcome (e.g. class background) MECHANISM (e.g. getting into Harvard) Many – if not most – of our readings explored social mechanisms (instead of laws and descriptions). Good example is Hirschman’s argument about the rise of “interests” as a paradigm – he traces a mechanism that moved human thought from a feudal mentality to contemporary capitalist ideology. Constraints: think Polanyi on embeddedness, or Burawoy on limitations of pure capitalist work. Context: think Tilly on state-formation, or Sassen on globalization. • See Hicks et al., p.20 for how the “era of grand theorizing” ended. May it rest in peace. Sociology vs. its Peers Different from economics, political science (sic), psychology, in several ways: 1) The social. (Most especially, “power” is inherently a social phenomenon). 2) Most diverse. Little common ground! 3) Aware of its own “historicity.” 4) Activist component.* * This one is disputed. Sociology Contextualized • Political Sociology is not a celestial, transcendent enterprise happening in some intellectual vacuum – it has a history. • Its limitations are not accidental and abstract, but historical and political. Historical contingencies in Ancient Greece, during the Middle Ages, during the Enlightenment in France, Germany, England, Scotland, the US, etc., up to the very present. • Sociology itself is young, and has undergone a centurieslong campaign of persecution, the likes of which other scientific enterprises did not. THE STATE, according to the Founding Fathers Marx “The state, along with all “political power,” “is merely the instrument of one class for oppressing another.” It is one of the tools in the “superstructure” that protects capitalist property rights and maintains the ownership of means of production in the hands of the ruling class. But it is a neutral tool, in the sense that it is not inherently a capitalist state – it can be a “dictatorship of the proletariat.” Thus the Communist Manifesto calls for complete centralization of the means of production and transport into the hands of the state, so that it can represent the working class. Another possibility is that the state “withers away” altogether with the installation of complete communism. “Do away with Capitalism,” Engels wrote, “and the State will fall by it-self. Early and late Marx differ considerably in conceptions of the state, but economic determinism is the common thread: economic conditions in society the state. Weber Durkheim Simmel “The state is a collection of legal, administrative, extractive and – above all – coercive institutions that not only define the proper boundary between state and civil society, but impact relations within civil society itself: In the Darwin-inspired evolutionary metaphor, society is an “organism” and the state is its “brain” which, “like a human brain, has grown in the course of evolution.” It has primarily a regulative function, keeping the forces of social disorder at bay: anomie, forced division of labor, the failure to replace traditional with modern norms, etc. Accordingly, the state’s duty is The state is roughly as Weber defined it, but the extractive function of this institution – relating to taxes, property regulation, and involvement in the money economy – is given more emphasis than the coercive, violent dimension. As the money economy expands, the “modern state” increasingly bureaucratizes, rationalizes and centralizes, becoming “based upon an extraordinary collectivization, integration and unification of all political forces.” “Of course, force is certainly not the normal or the only means of the state--nobody says that--but force is a means specific to the state. Today the relation between the state and violence is an especially intimate one. In the past, the most varied institutions--beginning with the sib-have known the use of physical force as quite normal. Today, however, we have to say that a state is a human community that (successfully) claims the monopoly of the legitimate use of physical force within a given territory. Note that 'territory' is one of the characteristics of the state. Specifically, at the present time, the right to use physical force is ascribed to other institutions or to individuals only to the extent to which the state permits it. The state is considered the sole source of the 'right' to use violence.” One of the forces behind the rise of the bureaucratized, modern state is democratization, which puts greater and more diverse demands on government from increasingly varied groups and interests in society. Politics as Vocation. “…to work out certain representations which hold good for the collectivity. These representations are distinguished from the other collective representations by their higher degree of consciousness and reflection.” As society becomes more complex and differentiated, the need for coordination and regulation by a higher organ becomes more intense. In the economic realm, the state is one of the non-contractual elements that prevent the market from developing self-destructive dynamics. What most conceptions of the state neglect is that “there is interaction; and in principle, interaction always contains some limitation of each party [the rulers and the ruled] to the process.” The relation between the state and its subjects is thus bi-directional, with the “reciprocal character of the contract between rulers and ruled.” In modern society, the reciprocity of the state-citizen contract relates mostly to monetary relations, which originated in society. Andrea "Regardless of which of these stances seems most plausible, the belief in the possibility of radical alternatives to existing institutions has played an important role in contemporary political life. It is likely that the political space for social democratic reforms was, at least in part, expanded because more radical ruptures with capitalism were seen as possible, and that possibility in turn depended crucially on many people believing that radical ruptures were workable" (Wright, p. 8). This idea reminds me of the conceptions of power from the beginning of the course: the idea that people in power can hold power because people believe it is legitimate. Indeed, this is a common theme I've noticed throughout the course: the way things are perceived can play just as large a role as the way things actually are. Belief in change inspires action to change. Clara • On page 49, Mann says what destroyed "Hitler, fascism, and Japan alike" was that they relied too heavily on their "military prowess, regardless of the extent of their economic power." Does he mean here to suggest that military power sources must be founded upon or at least supported by economic power sources to achieve "imperial success"? Can one source of social power thrive completely independent of the other sources? In other words, can Mann's "overlapping" power networks also be understood as interacting networks? Continuing with this idea of "interacting power networks" -- on page 54, Mann says that "capitalist ideology has captured American law and politics and reinforces the invasion of the political realm by economic power relations". He seems here to categorize "capitalist ideology" as a form of economic power, which makes sense given its derivation from an economic mode of production--but is this more an example of interacting economic and ideological power networks? Could capitalism succeed as a source of social power without also co-opting ideological sources of social power? Did Mann's theory ever suggest that these sources could be separated? If they can't, how are we to definitively distinguish them (or is it never important to do so)? (I know Mann acknowledges that the four sources of power can fuse in a central party elite, but I suppose I'm questioning if one source really can dominate another, if sources of power can thrive independently without feeding into/supporting other sources (in a sense, is such fusion unavoidable to an extent?). Melvin “What I was trying to say about the United States was meant to indicate that race trumps class, and has consistently done so. Of course, it is coded. Politicians can’t express and overt racism and haven’t been able to do so for decades. Racism is coded in concerns about crime, housing, and “welfare queens”. (Mann 63) I wasn’t entirely sure what Mann was trying to say by “race trumps class”. Does he mean that people are more threatened by members of other races rather than members of lower classes? If so, while it is true that racism is coded in subtle ways (such as the racially disproportionate incarceration rate), I personally feel that this trend is slowly decreasing. First, there are more efforts to address the problems of mass incarceration, and welfare, as well as housing, is needed by members of every race. I personally have not encountered any stereotypes about the poor necessarily being a certain race. My question is, how relevant is this statement today? And does this mean that a majority of the American populations are covertly racist? Heterogeneity vs. Homogeneity • Mann reiterates an important point about welfare and the like that we have encountered before: it is no coincidence that power in democratic societies varies according to the level of sameness within and across societies. • More broadly, we’ve encountered throughout the course emphases on how heterogeneity matters at various levels: – – – – – – Individual; Political; Cultural; Ideological (i.e. political ideology); Economic, global; Economic, subnational. Meta-Point: Be VERY skeptical of any law-like generalizations – whether about nationstates, capitalism or democracy – that purport to apply equally across heterogeneous social spheres. Kate “Unless the Chinese change their spots and become more aggressive militarily, I would expect American empire to decline. If China became more militaristic then other Asian countries might well turn to the United States for help, and then overall there would be a continuation of hegemony more than empire.” –Mann, pg. 44 I thought this idea of maintaining power through conflict (the enemy of my enemy is my friend) was interesting given the current political climate surrounding terrorism in the world. My understanding of Mann’s argument here is that one of the best ways the US remains a global leader is by always having an enemy, in this instance China; that enemy allows the US to prove its strength as an ally, especially militarily, giving it the upper hand in spreading its hegemony through those alliances. There are often parallels to this form of allying when instances of international terrorism occur. After 9/11, for example, coalitions of western countries joined together to fight nations in the Middle East where the US believed there were large terrorist organizations; the same may occur now given the Paris attacks. Regardless of whether or not the enemy is even the “correct” enemy, as was largely the case post-9/11, countries band together and the leader gains more power. While there are some obvious distinctions in the way that countries ally together against entire nation-states versus individual terrorist organizations, often the fight against the latter has grown into a fight against the former anyway. “Nation-State at Home, Empires Abroad” (Mann p.48) • A common confusion in understanding world politics, according to Mann, is to conflate the nature of internal politics (domestic regime) with the nature of external, international politics (foreign policy). • In part, this confusion arises from a neglect of the distinction between centralized and decentralized power, which Mann emphasizes. Bottom Line: however power may or may not be changing in the XXI Century, there is no reason to believe that the nature of domestic nation-state power will become increasingly like international power relations. Ian “In a study reported in the journal Nature, in a selection of science topics the error rates in Wikipedia and the Encyclopedia Britannica were fairly similar” (Wright 3). This fact struck me as odd. I always knew that Wikipedia was a good source of information but I is hard to believe that the differences between it and the Encyclopedia Britannica were insignificant. This makes me wonder about how this mechanism can be used with other similar online tools or just in society in general. I still find it hard to believe that this form of a “real utopia” is practical in today’s world. It might work for a short time but then people’s egos get involved and others will get jealous and this will lead to the downfall of this “real utopia” because people will start to want some sort of credit/pay for their work. Wiki-Power & the Politics of Production • The Real Utopian quality of wikitechnology lies in its: – Horizontal reciprocity – Its being free for public consumption – Its high quality – Its international, multicultural scope. What other applications of Wiki technologies can you think of to improve society? Michael "...when speaking of 'the dark side of democracy'...the arresting nature of Mann's title was incautious given that liberal democracy has a relatively clean record as far as ethnic cleansing is concerned. But the title still seems to me brave and significant, forcing us to face the fact that normal people can act in repulsive ways - that ethnic cleansing can be popular and not...something engineered by manipulative political entrepreneurs." - Hall pp. 2 This passage is particularly resonant in the United States at the current moment, with particular regard to those who are not only seeking to purge the US of those they deem as threats based on their ethnicity (i.e. Muslims), but also seek prevent entry to the US on similar grounds (i.e. Syrian refugees, Muslim or otherwise). Nativist, bigoted ideologies are prevalent among major portions of US citizens on their own, regardless of enthusiastic race-baiting that is espoused by political hopefuls (i.e. Donald Trump). The point made by Hall is blatantly and painfully obvious in the media on a day to day basis. Porto Allegre: Politics of Popular Priorities • Participatory budgeting is even more of a Real Utopian success story because it managed what no representative city government has: – Sewer and water connections increased from 75% of households to 98% in less than a decade; – Number of schools quadrupled. – Health budget went from 13% to 40%. – Steady yearly increase in number of people participating. Could you imagine a model like this for Boston? What about the US as a whole? THE END, Hurray! CONGRATULATIONS! (But don’t neglect your final papers or Dr. Mandić will cry).