Against North and Weingast: it was not 1688 that was impo...

Against North and Weingast: it was not 1688 that was important so much as 1485, 1534, 1543, and 1642, all powerful steps away from quod principi placuit legis habet vigorem: Avner Greif and Jared Rubin: Political Legitimacy and the Institutional Foundations of Constitutional Government: "This paper opens the ���black box��� of endogenous political legitimacy and asks what role...



...if any, did political legitimacy play in the process rendering England the first modern economy, a colonial Empire and an exemplary democracy? Legitimacy entails obedience based on the moral obligation to follow the authority, and public displays of support from legitimizing agents increase legitimacy. Although the political authority can potentially select its legitimizing agents, the more the legitimizing agent has the power to decline supporting the authority, the higher legitimacy its support entails. Historically, the break with Rome that Henry VIII instituted during the English Reformation reduced the legitimizing power of the Church and the Tudors monarchs increasingly relied on Parliament as a legitimizing agent. They thus increased the power of the Parliament and its secular components. The endogenous change in the balance of political power was the ultimate source of the multiple institutional and policy changes that are the hallmark of England���s transformation...




#shouldread
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on May 01, 2018 15:11
No comments have been added yet.


J. Bradford DeLong's Blog

J. Bradford DeLong
J. Bradford DeLong isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow J. Bradford DeLong's blog with rss.