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Robert Michels, Political Sociology and the Future of Democracy (Paperback)
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Robert Michels, Political Sociology and the Future of Democracy (Paperback)
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These essays by the brilliant historian of political science Juan
Linz comprise a remarkable intellectual review of the life and work
of Robert Michels, his major book Political Parties, and the
dimensions of democracy as a functioning system. Linz elucidates
the importance of Michels in a way that offers more than a
mechanical view of political parties as some sort of precisely
ordered system of authority and influence. Instead, Michels offers
a view of politics that is bottom up and untidy, what he calls a
"reciprocal deference structure." Michels is not simply the father
of the iron law of oligarchy, but the idea of politics as a less
than orderly network of responsiveness, responsibility, and
accountability. Linz demonstrates, with magisterial power, why
Michels must be ranked as a foremost thinker in classical political
sociology. The remaining three segments of the volume cover areas
with which Linz has also long been identified. Each in its own way
illumines aspects of Michels as well. "Time and Regime Change"
articulates differences between change within a regime and change
of a regime--sometimes hard to identify because of the elongated
time frames involved. The next essay explains why Spain is neither
a traditional society nor a successful modern nation. The reliance
upon central authority displaced the hoped for evolution of a
society based on representative democratic institutions. The final
section. "Freedom and Autonomy of Intellectuals and Artists" is a
topic that gripped Michels and Linz alike. Freedom as a goal of the
intelligentsia has been frustrated by those who provide ideological
justification for repression of ideas and actions in the name of
higher values. This segment provides a bridge between Michels and
Weber--not to mention both of these major figures with Linz
himself. The role of state power in mediating intellectual freedom
is the leitmotif that blankets the twentieth century. The work is
graced by a full-length bibliography of the writings of Juan J.
Linz, prepared by his student and colleague, H. E. Chehabi.
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