Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Legitimacy (1)
- State Legitimatcy
- Beetham's 3 Criteria
for Legitamacy
- 1. Power should be acquired and
excercised according to established rules
- 2. Rules to be justifiable by
reference to shared and accepted
beliefs
- 3. Positions of authority are publicly
acknowledged by subordinates through actions
that confirm their acceptance
- Definitions
- Lipset,
1959
- Capacity of a political system to engender and
maintain the belief that the existing institutions
are most appropriate or the proper ones for
society.
- Citizens more likely to accept, deter, consent, and
submit to its decisions and rule; state can govern
effectively
- Uphoff, 1989
- Authority & legitimacy differ in
that one is a claim for
compliance while the other is an
acceptance of that claim.
- Basis for legitamacy
- Institutions/political
culture (Lipset)
- 1. Belief that institutions must be
appropriate for socieity
- 2. Effectiveness
(performance/development/
progress)
- Authority (Weber)
- 1. Charismatic authority
- 2. Legal-rational authority
- 3. Traditional Authority
- 4. Value-rational authority
(Spenser, 1970)
- Democratic System Legitmacy
- Contributing Factors
- 1. Proven, prolonged effectiveness
- 2. Constant economic development
- 3. Presence of widely accepted political symbols
- a. preservation of traditional symbols of
legitimacy b. development of strong, new symbols
c. combination of traditional and new symbols
- Sources
- 1. effective political system w/ relatively
equitable distribution of resources to major
groups
- 2. Existence of moderate tension & conflict, that
are facilitated by system's capacity to resolve
- 3. Cross-cutting cleavages, rather than
self-enforcing ones that fuel political intolerance
- 4. Acknowledge rise of new states groups,
incorporate political demands to existing political
system
- 5. Discourage politics of intolerance, by
discouraging ideological politics
- Sources in post-crisis of change
- 1. Continuity of important traditional integrative
institutions during transitional period
- 2. Providing new groups access to legitimate political
institutions
- 3. Extent to which secular political culture is institutionalized
- 4. Effective political system that provides some semblance of
stability
- Crisis of legitimacy
- 1. Arises from deep cleavages in society
- Results in revolutionary call for change.
- Occurs when major conservative institutions are threatened
- Major groups in society do not have access to political system in the
trasition
- 3. Emergent, politically active social groups are denied access
to political process (entry to politics crisis)
- Lipset's Hypothesis
- 1. Political leaders need
to resolve major issues
dividing society before
new ones arise
- 2. countries with low
level of effectiveness
and legitimacy will
require constitutional
factors that enhance its
chances of developing
into a stable democracy
- 3. two party
systems >
multi-party
systems
- 4. Territorial elections >
proportional
representation
- 5.Federalism > unitary state