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The Organization of Political Life

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1 The Organization of Political Life
Chapter 12 The Organization of Political Life

2 Chapter Outline Forms of Political Organizations
Social Control and Law Legal Systems

3 Forms of Political Organization
Bands - egalitarian Tribes - egalitarian or ranked Chiefdoms - ranked States - stratified

4 Bands Earliest form of human political structure.
Survived until modern period only in regions of the world with limited natural resources. Simple bands had a family head based on influence. Composite bands had Big Man leadership based on influence.

5 Bands simple bands Autonomous or independent political units, often consisting of little more than an extended family, with informal leadership vested in one of the older family members. composite bands Autonomous political units consisting of several extended families that live together for most or all of the year.

6 Big Men Political leaders who do not occupy formal offices and whose leadership is based on influence, not authority.

7 Influence The ability to convince people they should act as you suggest.

8 Authority The recognized right of an individual to command another act in a particular way; legitimate power.

9 Tribes Several economically self-sufficient residence groups.
Number between 1,000 to 20,000 people. Few formal leadership positions with limited authority, access based on inheritance and/or achievements. Group cohesion maintained by sodalities.

10 Tribes Autonomous political unit encompassing a number of distinct, geographically dispersed communities that are held together by sodalities.

11 Sodalities Formal institutions that cross-cut communities and serve to unite geographically scattered groups; may be based on kin groups or on non-kin-based groups.

12 Chiefdoms Several economically interdependent residence groups.
Number from a few thousand up to about 30,000. Centralized leadership, with a hereditary chief, with full formal authority.

13 States Usually numbering from tens of thousands up to several million.
Centralized leadership with formal full authority, supported by a bureaucracy.

14 Social Control Mechanisms by which behavior is constrained and directed into acceptable channels, thus maintaining conformity.

15 Laws Four attributes: authority obligation
intention of universal application sanction

16 Law A kind of social control characterized by the presence of authority, intention of universal application, obligation and sanction.

17 Self-help Legal Systems
Familial - actions and decisions are executed by the families or larger kin groups involved. Mediator - adds a neutral third party who attempts to negotiate and resolve the dispute peacefully.

18 Feud A method of dispute settlement in self-help legal systems involving multiple but balanced killings between members of two or more kin groups.

19 Court Legal Systems Systems in which authority for settling disputes and punishing crimes is formally vested in a single individual or group. Incipient courts are court systems in which judicial authorities met, frequently informally, in private to discuss issues and determine solutions to be imposed.

20 Courts of Mediation Court systems in which the judges attempt to reach compromise solutions, based on the cultural norms, and values of the parties involved, which will restore the social cohesion of the community.

21 Courts of Mediation Legal concepts based on the reasonable-person model. Formal judges who have the authority to hear cases and impose sanctions.

22 Courts of Regulation Laws and sanctions are formally codified.
Formal judges who have the authority to hear cases and impose sanctions.

23 Reasonable-person Model
Ask “How should a reasonable individual have acted under these circumstances?”, using prevalent norms and values.

24 Quick Quiz

25 1. Which of the following is not one of the four basic forms of political organization mentioned in the text? tribe band sodality chiefdom

26 Answer: c Tribes, bands and chiefdoms are all basic forms of political organization, and sodalities are not.

27 2. Big men were: tribal leaders leaders of simple bands often tyrants who imposed their authority on others leaders of bands that encompassed unrelated extended families

28 Answer: d Big men were leaders of bands that encompassed unrelated extended families.

29 3. Which of the following is not a form of social control?
law gossip and ostracism sorcery or witchcraft none of the above

30 Answer: d Law, gossip and ostracism and sorcery or witchcraft are all forms of social control.


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