Forms of government
Distribution of Power[edit | edit source]
- open v. closed societies
questions to ask about "distribution of power" > do you have to share power? / decision making/ > who do you have to please/ pay off? > who can you cut off? > how do you maintain legitimacy?
Forms of Government[edit | edit source]
>> to do Jared Diamond outline of social organization
Greek word origins of forms of government[edit | edit source]
- monarchy
- aristocracy:
- is most easily understood as a social class as opposed to a form of government
- as a form of government is a type of oligarchy
- will rule to protect landed interests and family lineages
- in other oligarchies, the elites will rule to protect commercial or other interests
- oligarchy
- rule by elites
- oligarchy v. aristocracy
- students can become confused by the distinction between the two
- oli = "many" but only in the sense of more than rule by pure Aristocratic birth
- oli refers to spread of power to non-landed, non-hereditary elites
- students can become confused by the distinction between the two
- tryanny
- democracy
Modern variations of Greek terms[edit | edit source]
- Kleptocracy = rule by the corrupt
- from the Greek "kléptō" for "I steal"
- ex. "kelptomaiac" = one who steals impulsively
- Kakistocracy = rule by the worst
- from the Greek "kakistos" for "the worst"
click EXPAND for 1877 use of the term:
American poet James Russell Lowell, 1877:
"What fills me with doubt and dismay is the degradation of the moral tone. Is it or is it not a result of Democracy? Is ours a 'government of the people by the people for the people,' or a Kakistocracy rather, for the benefit of knaves at the cost of fools?"
from [Wikipedia]
- Corporatocracy = rule by corporations
- Idiocracy = rule by idiots
Monarchy[edit | edit source]
Absolute monarchy in Europe[edit | edit source]
- as states were formed in Europe at the end of the feudal period (see Feudalism entry)
- monarchs who had governed through alliances and confederations with local or lesser princes or lords
- centralized state power around themselves
- monarchs who had governed through alliances and confederations with local or lesser princes or lords
- some monarchs were able to almost completely centralize power around themselves
- as opposed to sharing with a legislature or a church
- others were unable to completely take power
- example, in the Republic of Poland, the king was elected by and subject to the local lords
Louis XIV[edit | edit source]
- "l'etat c'est moi" = "I am the state"
- "Versailles"
- outside of Paris = detached from the city
- the traditional palace of French monarchs was the "Louvre", which is inside Paris
- outside of Paris = detached from the city
- "J'ai failli d'attendre" = "I almost had to wait"
- Louis XIV was purported to have said this when he stepped out of his palace door and his carriage was only just then arriving
- i.e., that he "almost" had to wait was an affront (insult) to him
Henry VIII England[edit | edit source]
> declared himself head of the Church of England >> transposes himself for the pope > selcting bishops > church taxes (tithes) > taking church property
other Eureopean absolute monarchs[edit | edit source]
- Peter the Great of Russia
- Frederick the Great of Prussia (Germany)
=== why / how do absolute monarch lose power? > they screw things up .... lose legitimacy > they tax too much to pay for excesses > they don't allow dissent >> can't force agreement so in Europe .. the solution is parliaments >> allows dissent, allows debate... shares power w/ the king