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The Modern Party State

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 November 2014

H. McD. Clokie*
Affiliation:
The University of Manitoba
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Extract

During the past two hundred years students of public affairs have been stimulated to an exceptional degree by the very evident radical transformation of life in human societies. Some have observed, named, and analysed the changes in material goods, building up an impressive structure of economic science and culminating in the popular controversy over capitalism and socialism. Others have investigated man's cultural development, though with less success in naming the elements being studied or in defining the units of measurement or valuation, but reaching a general climax of opposing nationalism to cosmopolitanism. The greatest number of observers, however, have been concerned with political changes, for if politics is not truly the queen of sciences, it has at least been thought to be so from antiquity on. Whether the subject is more difficult than others or whether too many have rushed in without appropriate training or adequate consideration of the subject-matter, it must be admitted that the heavy hand of tradition has lain heavier on political analysis than on other fields of knowledge. Students of politics have continued to use the historic names of monarchy, aristocracy, and democracy, discussing constitutionalism (polity, the old composite form) in Greek terms with modern instances such as checks and balances, separation of powers, fundamental law, etc. In popular controversy, however, the line of dispute has been drawn between democracy and dictatorship, which are also concepts derived from antiquity.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Political Science Association 1949

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References

1 Cited in Oxford English Dictionary, art. “Party.”

2 Essays: Of Parties in General (London, 1742), p. 112.Google Scholar

3 de Thoyras, Paul de Rapin, Dissertation sur les Whigs el les Tories (London, ed. of 1759), p. 60.Google Scholar

4 Even today, at the centre of the original home of party government, it is possible for an eminent authority on the practices and procedures of the system to write without any mention of party. Lord Hemingford's well-received little book, What Parliament Is and Does (Cambridge, 1947), is intelligible only to the reader who is already in the secret. For the uninitiated it is as misleading as a book on chess that described the play solely in terms of the movements of the pieces and omitted to assert that back of this are two players who are essential to the game.

5 Works (Bohn's, ed., 6 vols., 1880), vol. I, p. 375.Google Scholar

6 A Grammar of Politics (New York, 1929), p. 313.Google Scholar