Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDayna Gordon Modified over 9 years ago
1
BUS 430 Summer 2013 Dr. Rajiv Krishnan Kozhikode
2
Critical reflection report 1 Critical reflection report 2 Comparative Political Systems
3
o Each government is different – i.e., idiosyncrasies exist o But there are greater similarities between some governments o These similarities can guide classification of political systems o But for classification to be meaningful, It should NOT look at peripheral characteristics, such as regions It should look at actions and observable behavior
4
A political system can be understood by answering the following o What actions are performed by the system of roles? o Why is it done? o How does it affect the actions and behaviors of others? Roles are the micro-unit of analysis in a political system system Roles are an actor’s orientation which constitutes and defines his/her participation in an interactive process… o These roles include: government agencies, political parties, pressure groups, media, public at large. Roles are enacted based on a set of complementary expectations – i.e., actor’s own actions and those others that an actor interacts with. Such expectations are backed by coercion A political system comprises of a pattern of interacting roles affecting decisions backed by the threat of coercion
5
Orientation to political action determine the what and why questions Embedded in patterns that determine the how question Hence, political culture refers to a political system that is embedded in a particular pattern of orientations to political action
6
Anglo-American Pre-industrial/partially industrialized Totalitarian Continental European
7
Highly differentiated roles Manifest, organized and bureaucratized High degree of stability in functions Diffusion of power and influence within the whole political system But there could be multiple cultures within a same system Or, multiple systems for a same political culture. Existence of a rational political market for votes and in exchange for policies. Broadly shared ideas of a secular political culture o Freedom, mass welfare and security o With differing emphasis on either.
8
Mixed political cultures Mixed political systems Modernization leads to Anglo-American system But loss of traditional values creates uncertainty Leads to political instability Some charismatic leaders might emerge So a combination of modern and old world
9
Manufactured homogeneity Cannot be fully coercive Some amount of benevolence needed Tries to create illusion of political inclusion through one party elections
10
Again a mix Religion based Class based Economic development based Or a mix of any of these emphasis The political market is not for exchange of political goods and services but for particularistic ends such as transformation of political system into something other than a bargaining agency.
11
Should the state and religion separate? Can it be separate? What are the evidences? o Secularization has be prophesied but not taken off o Fundamentalism has emerged in many places How should we look at it then? o Market for religion o Different religions co-exist because not all religions cater to the needs of the entire society
12
No role for religion in state/politics Modernization will lead to scientific thinking and avoid traditional superstitions Multiple religions preach different ideas about reality, so disagreements will lead people to neglect religion altogether.
13
Ironically, it is modernization People face uncertainty in the absence of religion There is resistance to scientific approaches There is also identification perhaps in the presence of multiple religions There is need to consider the existence of a market for religions, just like there is a market for ideologies How organized are the religious institutions to warrant political clout?
14
Next session we will look at: Different IR systems
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.