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Tables of Contents for Frameworks of Power
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Acknowledgements
xi
 
Preface
xv
 
Frameworks of Power: an Overview of the Argument
1
20
Introduction
1
4
Hobbes and Machiavelli as precursors of power
5
3
Power and agency in the `Community Power Debate'
8
2
Power and intention
10
1
Non-decision, mobilization of bias and the two faces of power
11
2
Power and three dimensions: a radical view
13
1
Agency and structure in the analysis of power
14
1
Dominant ideology and disciplinary power
15
1
Circuits of power
16
4
Conclusion
20
1
Power: Traditional Roots, Modern Problems
21
18
Introduction
21
1
Hobbes
22
3
Hobbes' myth
25
2
Hobbes' choice and its conceptual extension
27
2
Machiavelli: the contrast with Hobbes
29
5
Metaphors for moderns: Hobbes and Machiavelli
34
2
Conclusion
36
3
Political Community, Methodological Procedures and the Agency Model
39
27
Introduction
39
2
Metaphorical continuities
41
5
Classical elitism
46
2
Floyd Hunter and the community power elite
48
2
Dahl's methodological challenge to contemporary elitism
50
7
Dahl's critique of the ruling elite model
57
2
Newton's critique of the pluralist model
59
5
Conclusion
64
2
The Power of Intention
66
20
Introduction
66
1
Some stories about power
67
2
Elaborating stories
69
3
Russell, Weber and Wrong: the power of intention
72
3
Bachrach and Baratz: the two faces of power?
75
8
Is power something actualized or not?
83
1
Conclusion
84
2
Lukes' Dimensions and Epistemology
86
43
Introduction
86
2
Lukes' three-dimensional model and the centrality of `interests'
88
4
Habermas: real interests in ideal speech situations
92
3
Benton and the `paradox of emancipation'
95
3
Lukes' model of power and structure
98
5
Power, interests and hegemony: Gaventa and Whitt
103
12
Interests and epistemology
115
6
Realism, causal powers and objectives
121
6
Conclusion
127
2
Giddens' Critique of Parsons and the Duality of Structure
129
20
Introduction
129
1
Parsons' power
130
3
Habermas on Parsons on power
133
2
Giddens on Parsons on power
135
3
Giddens' duality of structure
138
9
Conclusion
147
2
Post-structuralism, Sovereign Power and Disciplinary Power
149
38
Introduction
149
1
Post-structuralism and Foucault
150
3
Disciplinary power, bio-power and sovereign power
153
6
Sovereign power and its conceptual over-extension into dominant ideology
159
8
Disciplinary power and the dissolution of the sovereign power conception
167
11
From structural ideology to post-structuralist hegemony in Laclau and Mouffe
178
4
Radical conceptions of power compared
182
2
Conclusion
184
3
Circuits of Power: a Framework for Analysis
187
54
Introduction
187
2
Power in organizations
189
1
Mechanisms of power: disciplinary practices of surveillance
190
3
Organization and agency
193
5
Strategic agency
198
4
The reformation of power: the contributions of Callon, Latour and colleagues
202
5
Power and resistance
207
2
Rules and power
209
2
Episodic agency power: the `normal power' of social science
211
7
Organizational outflanking of resistance: Mann's contribution
218
5
Social integration and system integration: dispositional and facilitative power respectively
223
16
Conclusion
239
2
Constituting Circuits of Power in Modernity
241
32
Introduction
241
1
Urbanism as a feudal nodal point
242
9
Centralized states and the emergence of `public' administration
251
5
Markets and states and power
256
9
The modern constitutional nation state
265
6
Conclusion
271
2
Post-modern Postscript
273
3
References
276
15
Index
291