Theories of power: Weber Flashcards

1
Q

Power (3):

A
  • Machiavelli: political and economic sphere.
  • Habermas: public sphere integrated with personal dimensions.
  • Weber: concentration of domination as the central element of power, and the manipulation of others.
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2
Q

Weber’s forms of power (3):

A

Emphasis on domination.

  • Charismatic (familial or religious)
  • Traditional (patriarchs, royal, aristocracy)
  • Rational-legal (modern bureaucratic).
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3
Q

Weber’s concept of instrumental rationality (stems from legal-rational) [3]:

A
  • Modern bureaucracies wield distinct forms of power, relying on ‘objectivised’ procedures and impersonal relationships.
  • Social workers will have this form of authority.
  • He describes it as an iron cage, as we lose our humanity and become a part of a machine (efficiency as the goal, not morals).
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4
Q

Legal-rational authority relies on (5):

…also note issues with this authority (4).

A
  • Impersonal relations.
  • Abstract rules.
  • Political neutrality.
  • Objective decision-making is removed from any one person’s influence.
  • Ascension-based on merit.

Issues: creates a stagnant system; complacent with discrimination/disadvantage; loss of moral guidance; leads to generalist approaches.

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5
Q

Modern institutions and bureaucratic domination (3):

A
  • Domination is achieved through knowledge production.
  • If you do not share in the knowledge systems that the institutions are built, you are othered.
  • Some individuals cannot derive power from legal-rational institutions (e.g. homeless, children, elderly, migrants, First Nations Peoples, etc).
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