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Edward C. Banfield (1916–1999)

Auteur van The Moral Basis of a Backward Society

16+ Werken 452 Leden 8 Besprekingen Favoriet van 1 leden

Over de Auteur

Edward C. Banfield was professor in the Department of Government at Harvard University.

Werken van Edward C. Banfield

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Daedalus, Winter 1961: The Future Metropolis — Medewerker — 3 exemplaren

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I thought this book should have included more ethnographic narratives of individual villagers' lives. The author describes their mistrustful general ethos in clear terms, but the details he gives seemed quite sketchy to me. If, as the author writes, this village suffered from a tragic failure to cooperate on any public works whatsoever, then the consequences of that tragedy could preferably have been illustrated with more personal histories than this book now contains. The author does cite a number of answers that the villagers gave to his questions and associations that they made, but I get the impression that he didn't really get a chance to study their lives in a spirit of mutual and free disclosure. The theme of this book is certainly interesting, but perhaps the ethos of mistrust also limited the author's fieldwork to such an extent that its conclusions are more of the theoretical than the historical kind.… (meer)
 
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thcson | 3 andere besprekingen | Apr 14, 2018 |
In the first 200 pages of this book, the author presents six case studies from city politics in 1950s Chicago. As the author explains on page 6, these political situations may often be viewed as ones where a proposal is to be adopted or is not to be adopted. In each case study, the author describes in great detail how various people and committees exercised their political influence for and against certain proposals. In a 150-page theoretical summary at the end of book, he presents a general theory of political influence.

The case studies are boring. It's hard to imagine who would today be interested in reading such detailed accounts of how minor decisions in city development were taken in 1950s Chicago. The list of persons and committees involved in each decision is so long that the reader soon loses track of who is who and can't recall what the author wrote about the same person a few pages ago. After reading through a couple of these case studies, I decided to skip the rest.

The theoretical part is of course much more interesting. Political influence can, at least in city politics, work almost like a medium of trade, like currency in the marketplace. Various players in the political game possess varying capacities for exercising influence, but that does not mean that those who possess the most will take all decisions. Influence is a limited resource, so an agent who exercises a lot of influence on one proposal will have a lesser amount available for the next proposal. Influence-poor actors who care most about a given proposal may exercise more influence to get it passed than indifferent influence-rich actors will expend against it.

The final chapter of the book provides an interesting discussion on whether this sort of influence-balancing can generate a positive system of "social choice", where disagreements can be mediated more effectively than through central planning. This depends not only on how the political machine works, but also on the sources from which influence political actors can obtain their influence. At least in 1950s Chicago, influence sources included political elections, wealth, reputation and standing in local communities, and of course past usage of influence. The questions are very complex, but the case studies illustrate that the real world is also complex, and realistic theories of political decision-making cannot wipe clean too much of that complexity.
… (meer)
 
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thcson | 1 andere bespreking | Feb 11, 2018 |
I have had my copy for over 50 years. It was an excellent book in 1965. I am sure that current books would a background for dealing city problems in the 21st century.
 
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tobagotim | Oct 30, 2017 |
 
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BmoreMetroCouncil | Feb 9, 2017 |

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Werken
16
Ook door
4
Leden
452
Populariteit
#54,272
Waardering
½ 3.5
Besprekingen
8
ISBNs
33
Talen
1
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1

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