Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Preface
- Contents
- Chapter 1 What is Politics?
- Chapter 2 Conflict and Cooperation
- Chapter 3 Key Questions
- Chapter 4 Political Actors
- Chapter 5 Political Conflicts
- Chapter 6 Political Power
- Chapter 7 The Political Landscape and the Wider Context
- Chapter 8 The Political System and the Political Community
- Bibliography
Chapter 1 - What is Politics?
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Preface
- Contents
- Chapter 1 What is Politics?
- Chapter 2 Conflict and Cooperation
- Chapter 3 Key Questions
- Chapter 4 Political Actors
- Chapter 5 Political Conflicts
- Chapter 6 Political Power
- Chapter 7 The Political Landscape and the Wider Context
- Chapter 8 The Political System and the Political Community
- Bibliography
Summary
This chapter examines what we mean when referring to ‘politics’ and ‘the political’. This is an initial discussion in which terms and concepts are used that will themselves be discussed in more depth in subsequent chapters.
I will present and discuss here a number of descriptions and definitions from authors who have occupied themselves with the question of what it is that characterises politics. When comparing their work, we learn that, despite important differences, these descriptions also have a lot in common. This leads to the conclusion that what politics is can be reasonably well described by a set of characteristics, none of which is always required, which can be combined in different ways, and which jointly are still not always sufficient to capture all the associations and connotations that the term ‘politics’ evokes.
The comparison and discussion drawn from existing efforts to define politics also show that it is impossible to formulate a single all-encompassing definition that will always be satisfactory. The reason for this is that the concept of politics is a ‘contested’ concept, as are other concepts which are often used in its definition. At the end of this chapter we will therefore investigate the character of such concepts and learn that the process by which they acquire a (sometimes dominant) meaning is itself part of what we call politics.
Definitions of politics
A review of the literature reveals an enormous number of definitions and descriptions of ‘politics’ and ‘the political’, but fortunately many of these are variants of a much smaller number of perspectives. The two most important of these are the aspect perspective and the domain perspective of politics. The first conceives politics as an aspect of virtually all kinds of human behaviour and human interactions. The second does not do so and instead regards politics as only existing in a specific, demarcated sphere of human relations. Other definitions of politics also exist that do not fit within either of these two general perspectives, the most influential of which we will also review.
The aspect perspective on politics
The aspect perspective on politics holds that ‘politics’ is one of the aspects of human relations and interactions in all different domains of life.
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- Information
- The Essence of Politics , pp. 9 - 24Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2018