AP Gov - Power, Authority, and Legitimacy
Legitimacy
When a large group of people believe that the government should have the authority that it does
Bureaucratic Theory
Appointed officials dominate the government through unelected jobs
Implicit Power
B does what A wants not because of anything that A directly says or does but because B senses that A wants something done or B for a variety of reasons wishes to do what he assumes A wants done.
Manifest Power
Based on an observable action by A that leads to B to do what A wants (police turning on a siren to pull someone over)
Power can be exercised as
Coercion through the use of force, Persuasion, Construction of incentives
Legitimacy by Habit
People become accustomed to it, it's a habit; the government retains legitimacy until a more compelling alternative comes along
legitimacy by historical, religious, or ethnic identity (HREI)
Especially true of new governments and new states
Authoritarian limits
Governments usually limit their authority with constitutions
Pluralist Theory
Groups complete and compromise to get the government to do what they want
Elite Theory
Groups or people who posses the most power dominate government (Marxist- control over the economic system equals control over the political system)
Majoritarian Theory
Leaders are forced to follow the will people because majority rules
Construction of Incentives
Make the alternatives so unattractive that only one reasonable option remains
Power can be based on
Money, affection, physical strength, legal status, possession of information, strong allies, determination, a family name, etc.
Legitimacy by Procedures
People have trust and faith in the procedures of government (elections, the legislative process, etc.) even if they don't agree with the results.
Legitimacy by Results
Provides to people what they most want: security, whether it be physical, from invasion, economic, etc. (people are willing to accept some bad side effects)
Four types of legitimacy
Results, Habit, HREI, Procedures
Power
The ability of one person to get another person to act in accordance with the first person's intentions
Coercion
The practice of persuading someone to do something by using force or threats
Authority
The right to use power based on a general agreement that a person/group has the right to issue certain orders and that those orders should be obeyed