Political system

Political systems are systems for the processing of political demands and supports into decisions that authoritative allocate values in society. The concept was formulated in the 1950s by political scientist David Easton who has been described as one of the “first generation of behavioral revoutionaries” in political science. The political systems perspective is deeply interwoven with Easton’s widely accepted definition of politics as ”the authoritative allocation of values in society“. According to Easton, political systems can be analyzed in terms of inputs, processes and outputs. Political inputs, he suggested are of two basic types: demands (for action, for concrete benefits or for other political outputs); supports (votes, ideological loyalty, party membership, donations, and the like). These inputs are then processed by the political system to generate outputs in the form of authoritative decisions allocating values. The model, like other products of the behavioral movement in political science is largely positivist in orientation. According to Gunnell (1983) Easton sought to establish a general theory of political science in the form of a deductive system so that the largest possible number of empirically-grounded generalizations could be deduced from a single framework. To a considerable degree the political systems model was successful in this objective, as analysts could, for example, compare demands, supports and the resulting decisions in executive and legislative systems, for example. Also, when coupled with more process-oriented models, like Robert Dahl’s policy process model arising out of studies of local government in New Haven, Connecticut, it became increasingly possible to systematically collate results from different political studies beginning with the demands and supports although the way through to the authoritative decisions these provoked. Equally important at the time was the inclusion of a feedback loop like those characteristic of most systems models of the time. In the case of political systems the feedback loop introduced a critically important time dimension and raised a broad range of interesting possibilities and questions of the impact of previous decisions on current patterns of political demand and support, and the impact of current decisions on future demands and supports. In the following decade, another American political scientist, Thomas R. Dye, took political systems theory to another level introducing a new level of inputs associated with urbanization and industrialization and treating outputs in terms of empirical results. From the perspective of the Dye political systems model, the earlier Easton model was easily and completely subsumed within the middle, political process, term. In sum: social and economic inputs such as urbanization and industrialization acted upon populations to produce certain patterns of political demand and support, which formed the inputs to the political system, and produced decisions (systemic outputs) which resulted in further distributions of benefits, establishment of programs and services and other outcomes. Both decision outputs and programmatic outcomes originated feedback loops, so that both decisions and the consequences of programs were seen as producing consequences for social conditions (summarized by urbanization and industrialization) which in turn further altered the patterns of demands and supports. And so cycles of the political system continued in multiple iterations. The Easton and Dye political systems models were the basis of a significant number of research studies in the second half of the twentieth century, and served as the basis for a number of textbooks and research summaries. In general, however, it does not appear that the political systems model has yet proved to be the source of an integrated deductive theoretical system of the type Easton originally envisioned. References