Top Banner

of 19

10426073 Political Culture Lecture

Oct 14, 2015

Download

Documents

Zlatan Mujak
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
  • Political Culture and Social Capital

    Stephen Fisher

    [email protected]

    http://malroy.econ.ox.ac.uk/fisher/polsoc

    General Argument Political Culture: The Civic Culture American Exceptionalism Social Capital Causal models 1: Making Democracy Work Causal models 2: Values driving both growth and democracy? Contemporary evidence on regime support Conclusion

    Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures

  • General Argument

    Political Culture refers to the pattern of beliefs and assumptions ordinary people have towards the world,

    as these pertain to politics. (Tepperman)

    - Not the same as ideology, but more diffuse and less goal directed.

    - Relatively stable over time and reproduced by political socialization.

    General Hypothesis: Culture influences political and social outcomes, especially the quality of democ-racy, governance, or economic performance.

    Those who believe in the importance of culture do not all agree on what aspects of culture are relevant

    and what outcomes they influence and how.

    General Problem: Which is the correct causal direction?

    Some want to argue both ways

    e.g. culture influences growth and growth influences culture.

    Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 1

  • The Civic Culture: Almond and Verba, 1963

    Political culture is made up of cognitive, affective and evaluative orientations towards the politicalsystem.

    Three basic kinds of political culture Parochial: No cognitive orientations toward the political system Subject: Cognitive orientations toward the output aspects of the system Participant: Cognitive orientations toward both the input and output aspects of the system

    These cultures are congruent with traditional, authoritarian and democratic systems respectively. Congruence is indicated by positive affective and evaluative orientations in the appropriate areas:

    there is a scale from alienation, through apathy to allegiance.

    The Civic Culture is an allegiant participant political culture. Pioneering work in cross-national survey research on five countries characterized them as:

    Italy: Alienated Mexico: Alienated and Aspiration Germany: Political detachment and subject competence US: Participant Civic Culture Britain: Deferential Civic Culture

    Falls short of making a claim that political culture causes democratic stability.

    Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 2

  • American Exceptionalism

    Alexis de Tocqueville (Democracy in America)

    - Democracy in America is successful because of a participatory culture and a belief in equality.

    Lipset (Continental Divide, 1963)

    Canadian culture is more statist, deferential to leaders, collectivist and conservative US is more independent, distrustful of government, individualistic, liberal and progressive. Reasons for the difference are historical

    American Revolution led to a migration of British loyalists northward and a divergence in politicalhistory.

    Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 3

  • Social CapitalAccording to Putnam (Bowling Alone), Social Capital . . .

    is defined as The features of social lifenetworks, norms, and trustthat enable participants to acttogether more effectively to pursue shared objectives.

    is an important factor influencing the quality of democracy, economic performance, health, etc. comes in different varieties

    Bonding: within groups Bridging: between groups

    is not always a good thinge.g. power elites have high levels of social capital

    is measured by a mixture of public engagement (e.g. voting, political action) inter-personal association (e.g. socializing, volunteering) inter-personal trust

    International Trends (Cabinet Office PIU/Strategy Unit report) Declining: US; Australia. Stable or ambiguous: UK (high); NL; Sweden; France (low). Increasing: Japan; Germany (from low base).

    Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 4

  • Putnam, Making Democracy Work

    Aim: To explain why performance of regional government in Italy is better in the North than theSouth

    Explanation: Not the wealth of the North, but its civic-community characterized by, Horizontal, rather than heirarchical, networks. Values of solidarity, civic-engagement, cooperation and honesty. Strong conception of citizenship and feeling of efficacy.

    The origins on the cultural difference go back 500 years to when . . . the North had republican city states with guilds, mutual aid societies and other civic organizations,

    and

    the South had a strong feudal system with heavy church influence.

    Demonstrates the causal influence of civic values by measuring them circa 1900 and showing theyinfluence current culture and governance. (Fig 5.6)

    Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 5

  • Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 6

  • Critiques of Making Democracy Work

    Jackman and Miller (APSR, 1996) uses the Putnam data to show that . . .

    The measure of governmental performance is problematic

    The components of the measure are not sufficiently collinear (correlated with each other)

    When the indicators of institutional performance are taken one-by-one, few of them are significantlycorrelated with either current or past levels of civic values (Table 3)

    Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 7

  • Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 8

  • Tarrow (APSR, 1996) accuses Putnam of,

    confusing policy performance with democratic performance (his measure is of the former) cherry picking: Finding confirmatory evidence in history and ignoring problematic evidence such as

    . . .

    variation within North and South the fact that city states were not so civic or republican early measures of civic values are correlated with progressive politics

    Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 9

  • Values drive both growth and democracy?

    In the APSR (1988) and Culture Shift, Inglehart argues

    Materialist values in the past improved economic performance (c.f. Weber)

    But wealth generates post-materialism which hinders further growth.

    However post-materialism improves civic culture which is associated with democratic stability. (APSR,Fig 6)

    Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 10

  • Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 11

  • Jackson and Miller (APSR, 1996) assess the Inglehart argument and point out

    Years of continuous democracy conflates political stability with the quality of democracy

    Since culture is measured in 1980 we have backwardscausality

    The indicators of culture when taken individually do not predict growth after controlling for wealth(Table 6).

    Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 12

  • Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 13

  • Muller and Seligson (APSR, 1994) develop a more complex model and find

    Support for gradual reform (as opposed to the status-quo or revolution) is correlated with the levelof democracy

    The democratic stability has an impact on inter-personal trust

    Otherwise no evidence for association between culture and democracy in either direction. (Fig 4).

    Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 14

  • Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 15

  • Contemporary Evidence on Political Culture

    Norris (Critical Citizens, 1999) argues that there has been declining trust in government and support for

    democracy.

    this is witnessed in attitudes as well as protest behaviour.

    Institutional confidence is influenced by,

    extent of political rights and civil liberties electoral system centralization of the state economic development being a supporter of the governing party some socio-demographic characteristics

    Different countries think that government is there to do different things.

    Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 16

  • Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 17

  • Conclusion

    Political Culture and Social Capital are different things, but they have aspects in common, e.g. turnout

    and trust.

    The nature of the relationship between either culture or social capital and the quality of democracy is

    difficult to establish.

    Stephen Fisher, Political Sociology Lectures 18