1st Edition

Redefining Politics Routledge Library Editions: Political Science Volume 45

By Adrian Leftwich Copyright 1983
    320 Pages
    by Routledge

    320 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book challenges conventional conceptions of politics which focus largely on the institutions of government and the associated struggles for power around them. It argues that politics is involved in all the activities of cooperation and conflict whereby people organize the use, production and distribution of human, natural and material resources. Found in all human groups, institutions and societies, politics everywhere influences and reflects the structures of power, social organization, culture and ideology. These central themes are illustrated by drawing on a wide range of societies, including the !Kung hunter-gatherers, the pre-Columbian Aztecs and the Pastoral Maasai, as well as modern Britain and Third World societies from Chile to China. Other examples - of village communities, a typical university department and the World Bank - show how institutions may also be analyzed in terms of the definition of politics used here. It is equally central to the argument that many of the most critical problems occurring in societies can be attributed to their politics, and this theme is explored looking at such problems as poverty, famines, epidemics, violence and unemployment in Britain and throughout the world.

    1. Redefining Politics: The Argument  2. Sharing and Equality in the Kalahari: The Politics of the!Kung San  3. Predatory Politics: The Aztecs   4. Cattle, Kralls and Pastures: The Politics of the Pastoral Maasai  5. From Village to World Bank: Politics in Department and Institutions  6. The Politics of Despair, Dustbowls, Disease and Devastation  7. The Politics of European Expansion, Conquest and Control  8. Scarcity, Inequality and Imbalance: Politics in Third World Societies  9. Equal Rights, Unequal Opportunities: Politics in Industrial Societies, the Case of Britain (Part 1)  10. Equal Rights, Unequal Opportunties (Part 2)  11. Conclusions: The Poverty of Politics; The Possibilities of Politics

    Biography

    Adrian Leftwich