State in Society: Studying How States and Societies Transform and Constitute One Another

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2001-09-10
Publisher(s): Cambridge University Press
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Summary

The essays in this book trace the development of Joel Migdal's 'state-in-society' approach. That approach illuminates how power is exercised around the world, and how and when patterns of power change. Despite the triumph of concept of state in social science literature, actual states have had great difficulty in turning public policies into planned social change. The state-in-society approach points observers to the ongoing struggles over which rules dictating how people will lead their daily lives. These struggles, which ally parts of the state and groups in society against other such coalitions, determine how societies and states create and maintain distinct ways of structuring day-to-day life - the nature of the rules that govern people's behavior, whom they benefit and whom they disadvantage, which sorts of elements unite people and which divide them, what shared meaning people hold about their relations with others and their place in the world.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments xi
Part I: Introduction
The State-In-Society Approach: A New Definition of the State and Transcending the Narrowly Constructed World of Rigor
3(38)
Part II: Rethinking Social and Political Change
A Model of State-Society Relations
41(17)
Strong States, Weak States: Power and Accommodation
58(39)
Part III: A Process-Oriented Approach: Constituting States and Societies
An Anthropology of the State: Struggles for Domination
97(38)
Why Do So Many States Stay Intact?
135(38)
Part IV: Linking Micro- and Macro-Level Change
Individual Change in the Midst of Social and Political Change
173(22)
Part V: Studying the State
Studying the Politics of Development and Change: The State of the Art
195(36)
Studying the State
231(34)
Bibliography 265(22)
Index 287

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