Class Power and State Power

Class Power and State Power
Author: Ralph Miliband
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 330
Release: 1983
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: UOM:39015005770402

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Social Class and State Power

Social Class and State Power
Author: David M. Hart,Gary Chartier,Ross Miller Kenyon,Roderick T. Long
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 345
Release: 2017-11-29
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9783319648941

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This book explores the idea of social class in the liberal tradition. It collects classical and contemporary texts illustrating and examining the liberal origins of class analysis—often associated with Marxism but actually rooted in the work of liberal theorists. Liberal class analysis emphasizes the constitutive connection between state power and class position. Social Class and State Power documents the rich tradition of liberal class theory, its rediscovery in the twentieth century, and the possibilities it opens up for research in the new millenium.

Class Power and the State in Capitalist Society

Class  Power and the State in Capitalist Society
Author: P. Wetherly,C. Barrow,P. Burnham
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 260
Release: 2007-12-14
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9780230592704

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This collection of new essays re-examines and evaluates central themes in the work of Ralph Miliband, a leading contributor to Marxist political theory in twentieth century. It provides an essential reference point for research within the Marxist tradition, and a valuable resource for students on a range of courses in political and social theory.

Class and Power in the New Deal

Class and Power in the New Deal
Author: G. William Domhoff,Michael J. Webber
Publsiher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2011-06-29
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780804779029

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Class and Power in the New Deal provides a new perspective on the origins and implementation of the three most important policies that emerged during the New Deal—the Agricultural Adjustment Act, the National Labor Relations Act, and the Social Security Act. It reveals how Northern corporate moderates, representing some of the largest fortunes and biggest companies of that era, proposed all three major initiatives and explores why there were no viable alternatives put forward by the opposition. More generally, this book analyzes the seeming paradox of policy support and political opposition. The authors seek to demonstrate the superiority of class dominance theory over other perspectives—historical institutionalism, Marxism, and protest-disruption theory—in explaining the origins and development of these three policy initiatives. Domhoff and Webber draw on extensive new archival research to develop a fresh interpretation of this seminal period of American government and social policy development.

What Does the Ruling Class Do When it Rules

What Does the Ruling Class Do When it Rules
Author: Göran Therborn
Publsiher: Verso Books
Total Pages: 290
Release: 2016-03-01
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781786630117

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The intricate practices of the elite and how they maintain their dominance. In his new book, Göran Therborn – author of the now standard comparative work on classical sociology and historical materialism, Science, Class and Society – looks at successive state structures in an arrestingly fresh perspective. Therborn uses the formal categories of modern system analysis – input mechanisms, processes of transformation, output flows – to advance a substantive Marxist analysis of state power and state apparatuses. His account of these is comparative in the most far-reaching historical sense: its object is nothing less than the construction of systematic typology of the differences between the feudal state, the capitalist state and the socialist state. Therborn ranges from the monarchies of mediaeval Europe through the bourgeois democracies of the west in the 20th century to the contemporary regimes in Russia, Eastern Europe and China. The book ends with a major analytic survey of the strategies of working class parties for socialism, from the Second International to the Comintern to Eurocommunism, that applies the structural findings of Therborn’s enquiry in the ‘Future as History’. Written with lucidity and economy, What Does the Ruling Class Do when it Rules? represents a remarkable sociological and political synthesis.

State Power Socialism

State  Power  Socialism
Author: Nicos Poulantzas
Publsiher: Verso Books
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2014-01-14
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9781781681480

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In State, Power, Socialism, the leading theorist of the state and European communism advances a vigorous critique of contemporary Marxist theories of the state. Arguing against a general theory of the state, Poulantzas identifies forms of class power crucial to socialist strategy that go beyond the state apparatus.

State Power

State Power
Author: Bob Jessop
Publsiher: John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages: 313
Release: 2013-04-26
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9780745657677

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Bob Jessop presents an up-to-date account of his distinctive approach to the dialectics of structure and strategy in the exercise of state power. While his earlier work critically surveys other state theories, this book focuses on the development of his own strategic-relational approach. It introduces its main sources, outlines its development, applies this approach to four case studies, and sketches a strategic-relational research agenda. Thus the book presents a comprehensive theoretical statement of the approach and guidelines for its application. Key features of the book include: an account of the authors theoretical development; a review of recent developments in state theory and the cultural turn in political economy; critical strategic-relational re-readings of major state theorists Marx on political representation, Gramsci on the spatiality of state power, Poulantzas on the state as a social relation, and the later Foucault on statecraft; applications of the strategic-relational approach to important issues concerning the contemporary state: its gendered selectivity, the future of the national state, the states temporal sovereignty, and the relevance of multi-scalar meta-governance in Europe for the more general future of the state. The book concludes with recommendations for future strategic-relational research in political economy and state theory.

Power and the State

Power and the State
Author: Gary Littlejohn
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 328
Release: 1978
Genre: Political sociology
ISBN: UCSC:32106001156550

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