Some Thoughts on the Relation of Political Theory to Anthropology
- 1 June 1968
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 62 (2) , 536-545
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1952947
Abstract
The study of developing areas has, in recent years, caused political science and theory to be increasingly aware of realities of non-Western government and politics. Comparative politics and its theory no longer, therefore, can avoid utilizing the results of the research of anthropologists and ethnologists in a way comparable to the use of historical data if they wish to be comprehensively empirical. Since the political theorist will not, as a rule, be able to become a practising anthropologist, the basic problem of such cooperation turns upon whether the investigating anthropologist asks the crucial, the basic questions in the first place. A broad survey of their reports and writings, such as the Human Relations Area Files afford, shows that this is by no means generally the case. Nor is this easy to achieve, for political scientists and anthropologists differ in their objectives. It has been suggested that the anthropologist is primarily interested in diversity, in how many ways something could be done, whereas for the political scientist and theorist such divergencies are important mainly as they lead to political insight and verifiable generalization. The utility of the writings of anthropologists for the political scientist is seriously impeded by the over-simplified and misleading understanding of the nature of power and authority held by many of them.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tribes Without RulersPublished by Taylor & Francis ,2013
- Primitive Polynesian EconomyPublished by Taylor & Francis ,2013
- Comparative Politics: A Developmental Approach. By Gabriel A. Almond and G. Bingham PowellJr. (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1966. Pp. 348.)American Political Science Review, 1969
- Man and His GovernmentPublished by University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress) ,1968
- A Manual of Nuer LawThe American Journal of Comparative Law, 1955
- Children of the PeoplePublished by Harvard University Press ,1947
- SECTION OF ANTHROPOLOGY: The Social and Psychological Aspect of Chieftainship in a Primitive Tribe: the Nambikuara of Northwestern Mato GrossoTransactions of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1944
- COMPOSITION OF ‘TORTS’ IN GUAJIRO SOCIETYPublished by University of Pennsylvania Press ,1937
- An African People in the Twentieth CenturyThe Geographical Journal, 1934