Unit-14 Power and Authority
Unit-14 Power and Authority
Unit-14 Power and Authority
Structure
14.0
Objectives
14.1
Introduction
14.2
14.3
14.2.1
14.2.2
Implications of Power
14.3.2
Marxian Theory
14.3.3
14.4
What is Authority?
14.5
Classification of Authority
14.6
Implications of Authority
14.7
Let Us Sum Up
14.8
Key Words
14.9
14.10
14.0 OBJECTIVES
The unit deals with the most significant area of fundamental research; namely, Power
and Authority. It is the central theme of political ideology. After going through this
unit, you should be able to:
14.1 INTRODUCTION
Recently, the idea of power has assumed an importance of its own, in the realm of
political theory. This is so because the meaning of politics has changed from one of
being a study of state and government to that of being a study of power. Power
is the primary objective of foreign policy. In international relations, power is the
capacity of a state to influence or control the behaviour of other states for the
purpose of promoting its own vital interest. Power capacity includes skills and techniques
in the use of consent and constraint, as well as the ability to persuade, threaten or
coerce to gain ascendancy over other states. States vary notably in power capacity.
Belgium and Switzerland are probably evenly matched, but the mismatch between
Belgium and United States is apparent. Some states are characterized as haves and
the others as have-nots. The former are well endowed with the assets of power,
while the latter seek to better their position at the expense of the haves. This
situation gives power struggle its essential character.
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We all know what power is, in a broader sense. Although we see it everywhere in
our lives, it is hard to define. While doing social and political theory, we try, however,
to make the concepts of power and authority more precise and clear. It is with these
basic concepts and definitions, we can later understand the other complex concepts
in the realm of national and international politics.
So far as the views of different authors are concerned, it surely help us to understand
the meaning of the concept in various perspectives. For Friedrich, power is a certain
kind of human relationship, while for Tawney, it is the capacity of an individual or
a group to modify others conduct as one desires. While communist leader MaoZedong thought of power as flowing from the barrel of the gun, Gandhi, an apostle
of peace, regarded it as the power of love and truth. Power is ascribed to different
things on different grounds. For instance, we speak of economic power, military
power, power of the brain, political/ executive power and social power. The common
thread in all these power manifestations means ability or capacity. However, we
come to one common generalization that power is the sum total of those external
influences and pressures which can make an individual or a body of individuals to
move in a required direction.
The distinctness of power with the other concepts like influence, control, authority,
prestige, rights and the like, enables us to understand the concept of power more
precisely and in a subtle way, which becomes useful for students of political
science.
Power is latent force, force is manifest power, and authority is institutionalized
power.
Power appears in different ways on different occasions, be it either in a formal
organization, or in an informal organization or in organized/unorganized community.
Power resides in a combination of numbers (especially majorities), social
organization and resources. This is the source of power.
The power theory as said earlier, had its first brilliant expression in the Leviathan
of Thomas Hobbes. He tells us that man desires power and even greater power,
which becomes the root cause of competition among individuals. But at the same
time, men like to live in peace in order to enjoy the power that they possess. So they
are disposed to live under a common power. After Hobbes, Hegel absolutised sovereign
power of the state to the extent of discarding all ethics of international morality.
Among the leading advocates of this theory in the present century, mention may be
made of Prof. H. J. Morganthau, who says that politics is nothing but a struggle for
power. The power theory found its concrete manifestation, when the Italian Dictator
Benito Mussolini declared nothing against the state, nothing above it giving birth to
the ideology of Fascism.
In all the above analyses of power theory, power is spoken only in a political sense.
However, power includes much more, within itself, like the power of soul, mind and
the power of ones ideas. Reference in this context may be made from Buddha to
Gandhi who had displayed their power of thought and ideology to the world.
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2)
Further, class power does tend to be taken over by the state itself, and gladly
surrenders to it; even in normal circumstance of advanced capitalism, the state takes
over more and more functions performed by the dominant class having a greater
share in the performance of these functions.
Thus, Marx sees a close integration between political power and the prevailing socioeconomic system and regards it as transient it shall disappear with the rise of the
stateless and classless society.
To understand the real nature of power, one has to move away from the juridical
edifice of sovereignty, the state apparatuses and the accompanying ideologies. Instead
attention should be paid to domination and the material operators of power. One
should focus on the form of subjection and the inflection and utilizations of their
localized systems and on the strategic apparatuses.
Foucault calls this power non-sovereign power, lying outside the form of sovereignty.
It is disciplinary power taking the shape of closely linked grid of disciplinary coercions
intended to assure the cohesion of the social body. As Foucault exhorted : we must
eschew the model of Leviathan in the study of power. We must escape from the
limited field of juridical sovereignty and state institutions and instead base our analysis
of power on the study of the techniques and tactics of domination.
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as well. So the agent does not enjoy a stable position. A charismatic authority tends
to be institutionalised. This is what Weber calls routinization of charisma.
Weber, however, recognised that none of these categories existed in pure form. The
British system is a mixture of traditional and rational-legal sources of authority. India,
according to Weber was a combination of rational-legal and charismatic authority.
Check Your Progress 2
Note: i)
ii)
1)
2)
How do the Liberal and Marxist views of the power theory differ?
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When we speak of an act giving a minister the power to do this or that, we mean
giving him authority. Jean Bodin in his work, The Six Books of Republic says,
Sovereignty is the absolute and perpetual power of a state, that is to say, the
supreme power to command. His discussion gives the impression that sovereignty
means power in the ordinary sense of the word. If by absolute power, Bodin means
the ability to issue effective commands, it would be power, properly speaking. If he
means the entitlement or the right to issue commands and have them obeyed, it would
be authority. His account of sovereignty makes it clear that he means authority,
whereas his use of the expression, absolute power suggests the first.
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2)
Are the terms power and authority related? Explain their relationship and highlight
the distinction between the two.
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Empirical
Sublimation
Arbitrary
Coercive
compelling, forcing.
2)
2)
The liberal view presupposes the state as an institution serving all the sections
of the people. It also grants equality to all citizens; in law, in voting and rights.
It considers the state to be an impartial institution. The Marxist theory of state
believes in historical evolution of the state, which is a product of the society in
which it exists. It reflects the class character of the rulers. It also believes in
class division of the society. The state for them is not an impartial arbiter of
disputes, as it is partial to the ruling class.
2)
Power and Authority are the names of two different, but related entities of
which one somehow depends on the other. Power is often used to mean
authority when we speak of giving someone legal powers.
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