"Social Structures" is a book that examines how structural forms
spontaneously arise from social relationships. Offering major
insights into the building blocks of social life, it identifies
which locally emergent structures have the capacity to grow into
larger ones and shows how structural tendencies associated with
smaller structures shape and constrain patterns of larger
structures. The book then investigates the role such structures
have played in the emergence of the modern nation-state.
Bringing together the latest findings in sociology,
anthropology, political science, and history, John Levi Martin
traces how sets of interpersonal relationships become ordered in
different ways to form structures. He looks at a range of social
structures, from smaller ones like families and street gangs to
larger ones such as communes and, ultimately, nation-states. He
finds that the relationships best suited to forming larger
structures are those that thrive in conditions of inequality; that
are incomplete and as sparse as possible, and thereby avoid the
problem of completion in which interacting members are required to
establish too many relationships; and that abhor transitivity
rather than assuming it. "Social Structures" argues that these
"patronage" relationships, which often serve as means of loose
coordination in the absence of strong states, are nevertheless the
scaffolding of the social structures most distinctive to the modern
state, namely the command army and the political party.
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