Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-767nl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-13T07:42:22.589Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

State, Centre and Bureaucracy*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2014

Extract

THE STATE, IN THE STRONGEST MEANING OF THE WORD, IS NOT indispensable to the functioning of civil society. Indeed society can often so organize itself as to prevent the emergence of a state intent on establishing itself as an absolute power. The very existence of the state itself, the consequence of particular sociohistorical processes, upsets the whole of the social system which is henceforth ordered around it. The relationships between the nobility, the bourgeoisie, the working class or, today, the middle classes, differ profoundly according to whether these groups were confronted by a strongly institutionalized state or a centre which exercised essentially co-ordinating functions. Still today the political systems which have simultaneously a centre and a state (France) can be distinguished from those which have a weak state without a real centre (Italy) or a centre without a genuine state (Great Britain, the United States) or neither centre nor state (Switzerland). In the first two cases, in varying degrees, the state dominates and manages civil society; in the two latter, civil society manages itself. It is therefore possible to distinguish societies in which the state attempts to dominate the social system by endowing itself with a strong bureaucracy (ideal type: France; paralle development: Prussia, Spain, Italy) from those in which the organization of civil society makes it impossible for a powerful state and a powerful dominating bureaucracy to emerge (ideal type: Great Britain; parallel development: the United States and the consociational democracies like Switzerland). Without claiming to retrace methodically the history of each of these states or of their political centres, I should like to sketch a broad outline of their evolution with the object of showing that the different relations by which the many governing groups are linked together within the different social systems depend sometimes on the formation of the state and sometimes on the simple formation of a political centre.

Type
Original Article
Copyright
Copyright © Government and Opposition Ltd 1981

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Footnotes

1 Nettl, J. P., ‘The State as a Conceptual Variable’, World Politics, 07 1968.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

2 See Badie, B. and Birnbaum, P., Sociologie de l’Etat, Paris, Grasset, 1979.Google Scholar

3 See Boutruche, R., Seigneurerie et féodalité, Paris, G. Duby, 1970.Google Scholar

4 See Samuel Finer’s felicitous application of Hirschman’s model to the history of absolutism in France: the peripheries being able, in fact to secede (exit), either by rebelling or revolting (voice) or again becoming loyal (loyalty). S. Finer, ‘State Building, State boundaries and Border Control’, Social Science Information, 13, Nos 4/5.

5 Howard, M., War in European History, Oxford, 1976, Ch. 2–4.Google Scholar

6 Otto Hintze, ‘Der commissarius und seine geschichtliche Bedeutung für die allgemeine Verwaltungsgeschichte’, Staat und Verfassung, Gottingen, 1962, p. 275.

7 See Fr. Olivier‐Martin, Histoire du droit. Cheuvrier, G., ‘Remarques sur l’introduction et les nécessitudes du “jus privatum” et du “jus publicum” dans les oeuvres des anciens juristes français’, Archives de philosophie du droit, 1952.Google Scholar More recently, Anderson, P., L’état absolutiste, pp. 2630.Google Scholar

8 Gruder, V. G., The Royal Provincial Intendants in the 18th Century, New York, 1968.Google Scholar

9 Corvisier, A. V., L’armée française de la fin du 17e siècle au Ministère de Choiseuil. Le soldat, 2 vols. Paris, 1964.Google Scholar

10 Finer, S., ‘Military Forces and State‐making’ in Tilly, C. (ed.), The Formation of National States in Western Europe, Princeton, 1975.Google Scholar

11 On the mercenaries, Kiernan, V., ‘Foreign Mercenaries and Absolute Monarchy’, Past and Present, 04 1957, pp. 66–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

12 On the recruitment of officers from the bourgeoisie, see Leonard, E. G., ‘La question sociale dans l’armée française’, Annales, III, 1948, pp. 139–40.Google Scholar See Nef, J. U., Les fondements culturels de la civilisation moderne, Paris, Payot, 1964, p. 79.Google Scholar

13 Durand, Y.. Les fermiers généraux au 18e siècle. Paris, 1971;Google Scholar Bosher, J. F., French Finances, 1770–1795, Cambridge, 1970;Google Scholar Dessert, D., ‘Finances et societé au XVIIIe siècle ’, Annales, July‐August, 1974.Google Scholar

14 Boissonnade, P.. Le triomphe de l’étatisme, la fondation de la suprematie industrielle de la France, la dictature du travail, (1661–1683), Paris, 1932.Google Scholar

15 Woosley Cole, C., Colbert and a Century of French Mercantilism, New York, 1939, p. 326.Google Scholar On the administration at the time of the absolute state, under its various aspects, see P. Legendre, Histoire de l’administration de 1750 à nos jours, Paris, 1968.

16 See for example Dupront, A., et al., Livre et societé dans la France du 18e siècle, Paris, 1965 Google Scholar, or Martin, H. J., Livre, pouvoirs et societéà Paris au XVIIe siècle, Geneva, 1969.Google Scholar

17 Mandrou, R.. La France au 17ième and 18ième siècles, Paris, 1974.Google Scholar

18 de Tocqueville, A. L’ancien régime et la révolution, Paris, 1952, Vol. 1, p. 122.Google Scholar

19 A. de Tocqueville, op. cit., p. 85.

20 At the end of this period, as Jacques Godechot has shown: ‘All the institutions modelled on the military organization built up in France an all‐powerful administration, highly hierarchical and bureaucratic in the extreme’, Les institutions de la France sous la Revolution et l’Empire, Paris, 1951, p. 664. On the strengthening of the bureaucracy under the Directory see C. Church, ‘The Social Basis of the French Central Bureaucracy under the Directory’, Past and Present, April, 1957.

21 . Vedel, G., Droit administratif, Paris, 1961, p. 44.Google Scholar See also P. Legendre, ‘La royauté du droit administratif. Recherches sur les fondements traditionnels de l’Etat centraliste en France’ in ‘La bureaucratie et le droit’, Revue historique de droit français et étranger, 1975.

22 Legendre, P., Histoire de l’administration de 1750 à nos jours, p. 385.Google Scholar

23 Leroy‐Beaulieu, P., L’Etat moderne et ses fonctions, Paris, 1911 (1st ed. 1883), p. 520.Google Scholar

24 Dupont‐White, M., La centralisation, Paris, 1860, p. 188.Google Scholar See also Dareste, R., La justice administrative en France, Paris, 1862.Google Scholar On centralization in the 19th century, see Lepointe, G., Histoire des institutions du droit public français au 19e siècle, Paris, 1953.Google Scholar

25 On this subject there is a vast body of literature. For a general interpretation, see Birnbaum, P., Les sommets de l’Etat, Paris, 1977.Google Scholar

26 de Tocqueville, A., L’ancien régime et la Revolution, p. 132.Google Scholar

27 Furet, François, Penser la Revolution française, Paris, 1979, p. 188.Google Scholar

28 Soboul, A., La civilisation et la Revolution française. Vol. I. La crise de I’ancien régime, Paris, 1970.Google Scholar

29 Anderson, P., The Absolutist State, Vol. 1, p. 106;Google Scholar see also pp. 18, 19, 43, 53.

30 See the contributions of Dobb, , Sweezy, , Hill, , Hobsbawn, etc. in Hilton, R., The Transition from Feudalism to Capitalism, London, 1976.Google Scholar

31 Goubert, P., L’ancien régime. 2. Les pouvoirs, Paris, 1973, p. 151.Google Scholar

32 Richet, D., La France moderne: l’esprit des institutions, Paris, 1973, p. 161.Google Scholar

33 Ibid., p. 180. In a somewhat contradictory way, D. Richet states however that what we call the. ‘public function’ was so identified with its holder that ‘it is impossible to retrace the history of any council or post without writing that of the individual who presided over it or occupied it’ (ibid., p. 79). This is tantamount to denying the specificity of the system of roles.

34 Le Clerc, B. and Wright, V., Les Préfets du Second Empire, Paris, 1972, p. 57.Google Scholar See also Zeldin, T., The Political System of Napoleon III, New York, 1971.Google Scholar

35 Gremion, P., Le pouvoir périphérique, Paris, 1976.Google Scholar Thoenig, J. C., ‘La relation entre le centre et la périphérie en France’, Bulletin de l’I. I. A. P., November/December 1975.Google Scholar

36 On the relations between the governing categories at various periods in French society, see P. Birnbaum, Les sommets de L’Etat, op. cit., and P. Birnbaum, ‘The State in contemporary France’ in R. Scase, The State in Western Europe, London, Croom Helm, 1980.

37 The bibilography is very extensive. See Rosenberg, H., Bureaucracy, Aristocracy and Autocracy: the Prussian Experience 1660–1815, Cambridge, 1958;Google Scholar Gillis, J., The Prussian Bureaucracy in Crisis 1840–1860, Stanford, 1961;Google Scholar on the present epoch, see Zapf, W., Beiträge zur Analyse der deutscher Oberschicht, Munich, 1965.Google Scholar

38 Trevelyan, G. M., Précis d’histoire d’Angleterre, Paris, 1955, p. 145.Google Scholar

39 Finer, S., State‐Building, State Boundaries and Border Control, op. cit., p. 119.Google Scholar

40 Kantorowicz, E., The King’s Two Bodies, Princeton University Press, 1957.Google Scholar

41 Aylmer, G. E., The King’Zs Servants: the Civil Service of Charles I. 1625–1642, New York, 1961.Google Scholar

42 Bayley, D., ‘The Police and Political Development in Europe’ in Tilly, C. (ed.), The Formation of National States in Western Europe, pp. 328–79.Google Scholar

43 Wade, H. W., Administrative Law, Oxford, 1971.Google Scholar

44 Losano, M., I grandi sistemi giuridici, Turin, 1978.Google Scholar

45 Nairn, T., ‘The Decline of the British State’. New Left Review, 04, 1977, p. 12.Google Scholar

46 Supple, B., ‘The state and the industrial revolution 1700–1924’ in Cipolla, C., The Fontana Economic History of Europe, London, 1973, Vol. 3, p. 313.Google Scholar See also Thomas, K., ‘The United Kingdom’ in Grew, R. (ed.), Crises of Political Development in Europe and the United States, Princeton, 1978, p. 82.Google Scholar

47 Weinberg, I., The English Public Schools: the Sociology of Elite Education, New York, 1967.Google Scholar

48 Mackenzie, and Grave, , Central Administration in Britain, London, 1957;Google Scholar Roberts, D., The Victorian Origins of the British Welfare State, New York, 1960;Google Scholar Abramowitz, M. and Eliesberg, V., The Growth of Public Employment in Great Britain, Princeton, 1957.Google Scholar

49 Gladden, E. N., Civil Services of the United Kingdom, 1953–1970, London, 1967;Google Scholar Self, P., Administrative Theories and Politics, London, 1973.Google Scholar

50 Loschak, D., La fonction publique en Grande Bretagne, Paris, 1972.Google Scholar

51 Armstrong, J., The European Administrative Elite, Princeton, 1973.Google Scholar

52 Birnbaum, P., ‘Institutionalization of Power and Integration of Ruling Elites: a Comparative Analysis’, European Journal of Political Research, 1978, pp. 108–9Google Scholar.

53 Urry, J. and Wakeford, J., Power in Britain, London 1973.Google Scholar

54 Guttsman, W., ‘Elite Recruitment and Political Leadership in Britain and Germany in 1950; a Comparative Study of MPs and Cabinets’ in Stenworth, P. and Giddens, A. (eds), Elites and Power in British Society, London, 1974.Google Scholar Johnson, R. W., ‘The British Political Elite, 1955–1972’, Archives Européennes de Sociologie, 14, 1973.Google Scholar

55 Crewe, L., Elites in Western Democracy, London, 1974.Google Scholar