Sign up & Download
Sign in

Some Social Requisites of Democracy: Economic Development and Political Legitimacy

by Seymour Martin Lipset
American Political Science Review (1959)

Abstract

The conditions associated with the existence and stability of democratic society have been a leading concern of political philosophy. In this paper the problem is attacked from a sociological and behavioral standpoint, by presenting a number of hypotheses concerning some social requisites for democracy, and by discussing some of the data available to test these hypotheses. In its concern with conditions - values, social institutions, historical events - external to the political system itself which sustain different general types of political systems, the paper moves outside the generally recognized province of political sociology. This growing field has dealt largely with the internal analysis of organizations with political goals, or with the determinants of action within various political institutions, such as parties, government agencies, or the electoral process. It has in the main left to the political philosopher the larger concern with the relations of the total political system to society as a whole.

Cite this document (BETA)

Sign up today - FREE

Mendeley saves you time finding and organizing research. Learn more

  • All your research in one place
  • Add and import papers easily
  • Access it anywhere, anytime

Start using Mendeley in seconds!

Already have an account? Sign in

Readership Statistics

127 Readers on Mendeley
by Discipline
 
 
 
by Academic Status
 
46% Ph.D. Student
 
17% Student (Master)
 
7% Student (Bachelor)
by Country
 
48% United States
 
13% Germany
 
5% United Kingdom