1st Edition

State Formation and Political Legitimacy

Edited By Ronald Cohen, Judith D. Toland Copyright 1988
212 Pages
by Routledge

212 Pages
by Routledge

The evolution of the state from earlier forms of political organization is associated with revolutionary changes in the structure of inequality. These magnify distinctions in rank and power that outweigh anything previously known in so-called primitive societies. This volume explains how and why people came to accept and even identify themselves with this new form of authority. The introduction... Read more
Introduction 1. Changing Legitimacy 2. Sabati-Ba’s Coup d’Etat: Contexts of Legitimacy in a West African Chiefdom 3. Legitimacy, Illegitimacy, and State Formation 4. Public and Personal Ideology in an Early State 5. Context and Authority in Early Mesopotamian Law 6. Inca Legitimation as a Communication Process 7. Sovereignty, Legitimacy, and Power: Prologomena to the Study of the Colonial State 8. Legitimation as a Process: The Expansion of Government and Party in Tanzania 9. The Legitimation of the Modem State: A Historical and Structural Account

Biography

Ronald Cohen is professor of anthropology at the University of Florida, Gainesville. He has held positions at the University of Toronto, McGill University, Northwestern University, and Ahmadu Bello (Nigeria). Judith D. Toland is a practicing anthropologist, director of her own management consulting firm, JDT & Associates, Chicago, and part-time lecturer in anthropology at Northwestern University.