Power, Its Forms, Bases, and UsesHarper and Row, 1980 - 326 pages |
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action actors actual Anthony Giddens argued Bierstedt Chapter claim coercion coercive authority collective goals collective power collective resources command competent authority compliance comprehensiveness and intensity concept conflict consciousness consensus Dahl Dahrendorf definition democracy democratic discussion distinction domination economic editor effects élite example exercise of power forms of power Giddens groups Guenther Roth Hannah Arendt Hobbes holder and power human Ibid ideology individual resources influence interaction latent leaders legitimacy legitimate authority limited Lipset Lukes Machiavelli manipulation Marxist Max Weber means motives movements norms obey organization Parsons's party personal authority persuasion political mobilization political power possess potential power holder power relations power subject psychological R. G. Collingwood Ralf Dahrendorf regarded regimes role rule rulers sense Seymour Martin Lipset social sociologists Sociology solidarity Steven Lukes structure subordinate superego Talcott Parsons theory threat of force totalitarian University Press violence vote W. G. Runciman Wright Mills York