Miller - Chapter 8 (short in-class version
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Transcript Miller - Chapter 8 (short in-class version
Political and Legal Systems
(Miller Chapter 8)
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2008
The BIG Questions
What does political anthropology cover?
What is the scope of legal
anthropology?
How are political and legal systems
changing?
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2008
Political Anthropology
Political anthropology addresses the
area of human behavior and thought
related to power
Takes a broader view of politics than
political scientists
Political anthropologists study…
Power and related concepts
Political organization cross-culturally
Interactions among political units
Change in political systems
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Power and Related Concepts
Who has it;
who does not
Political organization
and government
Political anthropologists
address the area of
human behavior and
thought related to power
Social control
Social Conflict
and Violence
Power,
Authority,
and
Influence
Bases of power
Democratization
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Legal Anthropology
Legal anthropology addresses issues
of social order and conflict resolution
cross-culturally
Legal anthropologists study…
Laws cross-culturally
Morality and laws
Social conflict
Social control
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Politics and Political
Organization
Politics refers to the organized use of
public power
Is opposed to the more private
micropolitics of family and domestic groups
Political organization is the existence
of groups for purposes such as public
decision making and leadership,
maintaining social cohesion and order,
protecting group rights, and ensuring
safety from external threats.
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Political Organizations and
Social Groups
Political organizations and social groups
share several features
Criteria/rules for membership
Identity markers (clothing, card, title)
Internal organization (leadership hierarchy)
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Major Types of Political
Organizations
Bands
Tribes
Big-man / big-woman system
Chiefdoms
States
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Power, Authority, and Influence
Influence is the ability to achieve a desired
end by exerting social or moral pressure on
someone or some group
Authority is the right to take certain forms of
action
Power is the ability to bring about results,
often through the possession or use of
forceful means
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Band
A band is the form of political
organization associated with foraging
groups
The most long-standing form of political
organization
Because for most of human history we
lived in bands
Comprises between 20 people and a
few hundred people at most, all related
through kinship
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Band
Is characterized by…
Flexible membership
A lack of permanent, formal leaders
May have individuals with authority or
influence, but no individuals have power
over others
Leader is “first among equals”
Low conflict between groups
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Tribe
A tribe is a more formal type of political
organization than the band
Is typically associated with horticulturalists
and pastoralists
Developed about 10,000 to 12,000 years ago with
the emergence of these modes of production
A tribe comprises several bands or lineage
groups, each with similar language and
lifestyle and each occupying a distinct
territory
Members may belong to the same clan – a group
of people who claim descent from a common
ancestor, although they may be unable to trace
the exact relationship
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Tribe
Tribal groups contain from 100 to several
thousand people
Tribes are found in various areas of the
world
A tribal headman or headwoman is a
more formal leader than a band leader
Political leader on a part-time basis only
Relies mainly on authority and influence
rather than on power
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Big-Man/Big-Woman System
Is a form of political organization in which
individuals build a political base and gain
prestige, influence, and authority through a
system of redistribution based on personal
ties and grand feasts
Often considered within a tribal system
Most common in the South Pacific
Often involves a moka, which is a strategy for
developing political leadership that involves
exchanging favors and gifts, such as pigs, and
sponsoring large feasts where further gift giving
occurs
Sphere of big-man/big-woman’s influence
includes people in several villages
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Chiefdoms
A chiefdom is a form of political organization
that includes permanently allied tribes and
villages under one leader, a chief who
possesses power
Chiefdoms have large populations, often
numbering in the thousands
They are more centralized and socially
complex than tribes and bands
Ascribed/hereditary systems of social rank
and economic stratification
Chiefs and their lineages have higher status than
commoners
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Chiefdoms
The position of chief is an “office” that
must be filled at all times
Greater complexity of managing a larger
population than with band and tribes
requires greater responsibilities
Chiefdoms have existed throughout the
world
Sometimes confederacies are formed
when chiefdoms are joined
Headed by a “big chief” – a chief of chiefs
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States
A state is a centralized political unit
encompassing many communities,
which includes a bureaucratic structure
and leaders who possess coercive
power
Is now the form of political organization
in which all people live
Bands, tribes, and chiefdoms exist, but
they are incorporated within state
structures
Many thousands or millions of people
may be encompassed by a state
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States
States have much more power than
bands, tribes, and chiefdoms
Reflected in architecture, urban planning,
other symbols
Controls population with full-time police and
uses standing armies to defend borders
Have the power to tax
Have the power to manipulate information
Are hierarchical and usually patriarchal
There are fewer women in direct political
positions than men, but women may play
large indirect roles in politics
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Types of Political Organizations
and Leadership
Band Leader
Bands
Headman/Headwoman
Tribes
Chiefdoms
States
Chief
King/Queen/
President
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Social Control
Social control is the process by which
people maintain orderly life in groups
All cultures have rules that allow that
culture to establish orderly conduct
Even pirates have rules!
http://www.elizabethan-era.org.uk/pirate-codeconduct.htm
Rules vary cross-culturally
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Social Control
Social control is the process by which
people maintain orderly life in groups
Occurs through norms and laws
Norms are accepted standards for how people
should behave that are usually unwritten and
learned unconsciously through socialization
Violation of norms may simply be considered rude
and the violator may be shunned, or some sort of
direct action may be taken against the violator
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Social Control
In contrast to norms, laws are binding rules
created through custom or official enactment
that defines correct behavior and the
punishment for misbehavior
Are more common and more elaborate in state-level
societies
Religion often provides legitimacy for law
Especially prevalent in contemporary Islamic
status, but is also found in some laws in Western
states as well
Violation of laws have associated punishments, such
as getting fined, going to jail, etc.
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Social Control
Social control in small-scale societies is
characterized more through the use of
norms
Social control in large-scale societies is
characterized more through the use of
laws
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Social Control in Small-Scale
Societies
Bands are small, close-knit groups, which are
kinship based and disputes tend to be
handled at the interpersonal level
Punishment is often through ridicule,
shaming, or leaving the group
Emphasis is on maintaining social order and
restoring social equilibrium, not hurtfully
punishing an offender
Capital punishment (execution) is very rare
Punishment is often legitimized through belief
in supernatural forces
If do something socially unacceptable, something
supernatural may occur to punish that behavior
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Social Control in States
In states we have a large and often
diverse population – not everyone
knows everyone else
Increased social stress due to inequities
in wealth distribution, rights to land, etc.
These conditions necessitate…
Increased specialization of roles involved in
social control
Formal trials and courts
Power-enforced forms of punishment, such
as prisons and the death penalty
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Social Control in States
Increased specialization of roles
involved in social control
A variety of full-time professions devoted to
maintaining law and order
Judges, lawyers
Police – exist mainly in state level societies
Policing is a form of social control that
includes processes of surveillance and the
threat of punishment related to maintaining
social order
Varies in effectiveness from state to state
U.S. – high crime rates
Japan – much lower crime rates
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Social Control in States
Formal trials and courts
Court system with lawyers, judge, and jury
Used in many societies
Goal is to ensure justice and fairness, but the
analysis of legal systems in the U.S. and
elsewhere have shown some serious problems
Trial by ordeal
A way of judging guilt or innocence in which the
accused person is put through a test that is
often painful
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Social Control in States
Prisons and the death penalty
Prisons (places where people are forcibly
detained as a form of punishment) emerged
with state-level societies
Death penalty
Rare in non-state societies
Requires a great deal of power to condemn
someone to death – reflects state power and is a
powerful tool to influence people to act in a manner
acceptable to the state
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A British colonial
prison in the
Andaman Islands,
India, where many
Indian freedom
fighters were
imprisoned during
the 18th and 19th
centuries; now a
tourist site
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Social Inequality and the Law
Critical legal anthropologists examine
the role of law in maintaining power
relationships through discrimination
against such social categories as
indigenous people, women, and
minorities.
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Social Inequality and the Law - Australian
Aboriginal Youth and Justice
• More likely to receive the most severe
outcomes from criminal justice decisionmakers than white youth
• More likely to live in a poor neighborhood,
be unemployed, and thus be classified as
“undependable” and formally arrested
• More likely to appear in court rather than
Children’s Aid Panels
– Gale et al. 1990
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Social Inequality and the Law
Critical legal anthropologists examine
the role of law in maintaining power
relationships through discrimination
against such social categories as
indigenous people, women, and
minorities.
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Social Inequality and the Law
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Social Conflict and Violence
All systems of social control have to
deal with the fact that conflict and
violence may occur
Conflict occurs on many scales
Private conflicts
Interpersonal conflict
Conflict at the household level
Public conflicts
Ethnic conflicts
Warfare
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Ethnic Conflict
Ethnic pluralism is a characteristic of
most states in the world today.
Ethnic conflict may result from an ethnic
group’s attempt to gain more autonomy
or more equitable treatment.
May also be caused by a dominant
group’s actions to subordinate, oppress,
or eliminate an ethnic group by genocide
or ethnocide
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Ethnic Conflict
Political analysts and journalists often cite
language, ethnicity, and religion as the
biggest causes of conflict worldwide
Ethnic identities commit people to a cause
Deeper issues often exist such as claims to
material resources (land, water, etc.) which
may exacerbate ethnic conflicts
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Example of an
ethnic group
seeking territorial
recognition:
The Kurds of the
Middle East
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Ethnic Conflict
In the past few decades, political
violence has increasingly been enacted
within states rather than between
states
Intra-state (within state) violence
constitutes the majority of the many
“shooting wars” in the world today
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Warfare
Warfare is organized conflict involving group
action directed against another group and
involving lethal force.
Cultural variation exists in the frequency and
seriousness of wars
Intergroup conflicts among free-ranging
foragers that would fit the definition of war do
not exist in the ethnographic record
Informal, non-hierarchical political
organization among bands is not conducive
to waging armed conflict
Bands do not have special military forces or
leaders
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Warfare
Warfare likely originated with domestication of
plants and animals
Led to increased population density, different
groups close to each other and often
competing with each other for resources
Warfare more common in tribes, chiefdoms,
and states than in bands
More influential leaders
How often and what types of warfare are
engaged in vary depending on the society and
many factors
Costa Rica – no army
U.S. – army
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Warfare
Causes of war
Defending values
Defending freedom
“Operation Enduring Freedom”
Defending democracy
Defending human rights
Supporting allies
Extending boundaries
Securing more resources
Reacting to aggression
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Warfare
One theory of effective warfare…
For war to be an effective tool of
domination and for domination to be
maintained after a conquest, there must
be the introduction of a new economic
and political system and an ideology
that wins over the population
Physical domination combined with
ideological dominance
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Changes in Political and Legal
Systems
Contemporary political anthropologists
are most interested in political dynamics
and change, especially in how the state
affects local people’s lives.
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Changes in Political and Legal
Systems
Emerging and
transnational
nations
Democratization
Women in politics
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Emerging Nations and
Transnational Nations
A nation is a group of people who share
a language, culture, territorial base,
political organization, and history
Not to be confused with a state
Example Puerto Rico
Half of the “nation” lives outside of the
home territory
Are forming a transnational identity
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Example of a
transnational
nation:
Puerto Rico
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Democratization
Democratization is the process of
transformation from an authoritarian
regime to a democratic regime.
Has varying levels of success
Transition appears to be most difficult
when the change is from highly
authoritarian socialist regimes
Often difficult because an economic
transition in addition to a political one
Transition from state controlled government
planned economy to a free market, capitalist
economy
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The BIG Questions Revisited
What does political anthropology cover?
What is the scope of legal
anthropology?
How are political and legal systems
changing?
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2008