UCSP 2.1 Political Organization
UCSP 2.1 Political Organization
Concept Notes:
POLITICAL ORGANIZATION refers to the way power is distributed and embedded in societies
Who has power?
How does power differ from authority?
How is power organized and administered?
How is order maintained?
POWER
Potency, capability, charisma (individual)
Ability of person to impose its will in social action upon another
Tactical or organizational power -- The instrumentalities through which individuals or groups direct or
circumscribe the actions of others
Structural power – power that organizes and orchestrates the settings themselves & that specifies the
direction & distribution of energy flows
LEGITIMACY - the socially recognized right to hold, use, and allocate power
The Band
small group of politically independent, though related, households
all social relationships based on kinship
least complex form of political organization
associated with foraging forms of subsistence
decisions made through consensus
no fixed leadership, only informal recognition of prowess
The Tribe
tribal system consists of separate bands or villages
integrated through lineages, clans, age grades, or other associations cross-cutting kinship and
territory
associated with farming or herding subsistence strategies
greater population density
no centralized leadership
typically someone respected for wisdom or prowess – charisma & “big men”
group decisions by consensus
leaders of localized descent groups or a territorial group
authority is personal (a) not elected, (b) no formal office (c) status result of personal behavior
status often achieved through exchange (a) Gift exchange (b) Redistribution – public
exchange of scarce resources
Chiefdom
►a regional society in which one or more local groups are organized under a single ruling individual –
the chief – who is at the head of a ranked hierarchy of people
The Chief
Divine king – macrocosm and microcosm
status determined by closeness to chief
office of chief often hereditary e.g. passing to son or to sister’s son
also based on talents
often conceived as a semi-sacred position
may accumulate personal wealth to add to power
Chiefdom
► a true authority figure with a formal office
► can distribute resources
associated with redistributive economies
chief controls surpluses and labour
may collect taxes or tribute
may recruit labour for community projects
►irrigation, a temple, a palace e.g. can conscript for military
► recognized hierarchy linked to chief
► tend to be unstable
► Rank society
► do not have unequal access to economic resources or to power, but they do contain social
groups having unequal access to prestige
► Unequal access to prestige often reflected in position of chief to which only some members of a
specified group in the society can succeed
► Ascribed status
Guide Questions:
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b. Give at least two examples of a Philippine tribal group and describe each.
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22. the state
►the most formal of political organizations and is one of the hallmarks of civilization
►political power is centralized in a government which may LEGITIMATELY use force to regulate the
affairs of its citizens ►Weber’s monopoly on the legitimate use of force
23. The state: associated with –
►increased food production (agriculture and industry)
►irrigation and transformation of landscape
►increased population
►fixed territory
►developed market system
►appearance of cities developed urban sector
24. The state: associated with –
►appearance of bureaucracy
►military
►usually an official religion
►delegation of authority to maintain order
within and without its borders
►right to control information
►authority is formal and impersonal Holding office and the person
25. The state: associated with –
►differentiation in population appears – social stratification
►appearance of ethnicity
►permanent, heritable inequality
slaves, castes and classes
►social conflict increases
26. original states appeared 5000 years ago
►primary states are agricultural
►theories about their formation
►military needs, irrigation needs, environmental conditions
27. why the state? from band to state
► more wealth
► more people
► more settled
► more inequality and ranking
► less reliance on kinship
► more internal and external conflict
► increased power and responsibility to leaders
► increased burden to citizens to support political organization
► increased use of formal, legal structures for adjudication
28. The Nation (-State)
► modern nation-state a more recent phenomenon
most have appeared since the end of WWII
► communities of people who see themselves as “one people” on the basis of common ancestry,
history, society, institutions, ideology, language, territory, and (often) religion
► anthropology questions this reality while recognizing the power of the idea
► differences are suppressed in modern nation- states
29. NATION & NATIONALITY
►nation was once a term that referred to tribe, indigenous people, or ethnic group - collectivity
sharing single language, religion, history, territory, ancestry, kinship (Herder & volk)
►nation comes to mean the state = a country
►a sociopolitical form, the modern state composed of diverse ethnic groups
30. Nation as “Imagined Community”
►"it is imagined because the members of even the smallest nation will never know most of their
fellow members, meet them, or even hear of them, yet in the minds of each lives the image of their
communion" (Anderson p.15)