Re-Reading Pareto on Elite Power and Societal Bipolarisation utilises key ideas common to Pareto's elite theory, general sociology and theory of demagogic plutocracy, and fleshes out a unique perspective for making sense of contemporary societal bipolarisation in terms of friend-enemy codings.
Re-Reading Pareto on Elite Power and Societal Bipolarisation utilises key ideas common to Pareto's elite theory, general sociology and theory of demagogic plutocracy, and fleshes out a unique perspective for making sense of contemporary societal bipolarisation in terms of friend-enemy codings.
Alasdair J. Marshall is an associate professor at the Business School at Southampton University and has authored close to a hundred publications - several of them on Pareto and many more relating to diverse matters of risk, uncertainty, culture and ethics within organisations.
Inhaltsangabe
Part One - A New Reading of Pareto 1.0 Introduction 1.1 Metapolitical Conflict: Liberal Elites vs. Conservative Non-elites 1.2 The debt to Machiavelli 1.3 Animal Spirits 1.4 Dissident Mindset 1.5 A Projection-Adjusted Reading of Pareto 1.6 Dissident Paretian Analysis as Striving for Authenticity 1.7 The Core Theory: Mind-Society Interaction 1.8 Paretian Sociology as Critical Guidance for Elites 1.9 (Meta)Political Character Types Part Two - Pareto's Open elites 2.0 Why we need Pareto Today 2.1 Pareto's Elites 2.2 Pareto's 'Mirror for Elites' Guidance as Open elites Advocacy 2.3 The Idea of a Paretian Theory of Democracy 2.4 Elite Power - and the Futility of Challenge from Below 2.5 Elite Categories 2.6 Elite Social Character 2.7 Political Elites and Counter-Elites 2.8 Elite vs Non-elite Bipolarisation 2.9 Open Elites vs Open Societies Part Three - A Forward-Looking Theory 3.0 Social Forecasting and Modelling for Societal Bipolarisation 3.1 Pareto's Final Warning: Demagogic Plutocracy 3.2 Conflict Containment across Lower Elite Echelons 3.3 A Paretian 'Difference Engine' Explanation for recurring Elite vs Non-Elite Conflict 3.4 A Paretian Risk Barometer for Fundamental Social Conflict 3.5 There's this Lion... 3.6 General Conclusion
Part One - A New Reading of Pareto 1.0 Introduction 1.1 Metapolitical Conflict: Liberal Elites vs. Conservative Non-elites 1.2 The debt to Machiavelli 1.3 Animal Spirits 1.4 Dissident Mindset 1.5 A Projection-Adjusted Reading of Pareto 1.6 Dissident Paretian Analysis as Striving for Authenticity 1.7 The Core Theory: Mind-Society Interaction 1.8 Paretian Sociology as Critical Guidance for Elites 1.9 (Meta)Political Character Types Part Two - Pareto's Open elites 2.0 Why we need Pareto Today 2.1 Pareto's Elites 2.2 Pareto's 'Mirror for Elites' Guidance as Open elites Advocacy 2.3 The Idea of a Paretian Theory of Democracy 2.4 Elite Power - and the Futility of Challenge from Below 2.5 Elite Categories 2.6 Elite Social Character 2.7 Political Elites and Counter-Elites 2.8 Elite vs Non-elite Bipolarisation 2.9 Open Elites vs Open Societies Part Three - A Forward-Looking Theory 3.0 Social Forecasting and Modelling for Societal Bipolarisation 3.1 Pareto's Final Warning: Demagogic Plutocracy 3.2 Conflict Containment across Lower Elite Echelons 3.3 A Paretian 'Difference Engine' Explanation for recurring Elite vs Non-Elite Conflict 3.4 A Paretian Risk Barometer for Fundamental Social Conflict 3.5 There's this Lion... 3.6 General Conclusion
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