Seeing social order and its requisite mechanisms of social control as the foundational building blocks for any theory of development seems sensible to me.
This kinda plays into something Gavin said in the Islamaphobia thread:
What the fuck, animal and tribal goals? People kill for money, mostly.
Contrary to this, I reckon that there are 3 broad factors that motivate violence:
1. power and status (political)
2. control of resources and opportunities for accumulation (economic)
3. identity/ideational (religous, ethnic, tribal, national, organisational)
Given that violence has been prevelent throughout our history and remains so in the present day, a question of key importance must be:
what limits the use of violence in society?
I think the answer lies in
social control through an institutionalised order which regulates behaviour, built on a mix of:
1. control of violence exercised through political authority / coercive laws backed up with legitimate threats of violence
2. internalised systems of consent / symbolic discourses (like shared norms, values, codes of coduct, belief systems etc, which often have informal enforcement mechanisms like ostracism from a group, loss of reputation, use of illegitimate force like a private army or bunch of thugs).
3. guarantee of material economic means (for elites and masses)
*********
Definition of legitimate from
here:
'lawful: authorized, sanctioned by, or in accordance with law'.
But who sets the laws? Is the authority or legitimacy of those people widely accepted, or highly contested, within society?
The art of state-building involves creating a highly institutionalized order where violence is consolidated/monopolised, the legitimacy of the state to set coercive laws is widely accepted, and economic reproduction is secured. Integral to this process is the ability of elites to create a symbolic discourse to reinforce the state as a legitimate order. (EDIT: Gramsci's notion of hegemony as a mix of consent and coercion is totally relevant here)
In the absence of a consolidated modern state, alternative social orders may arise which become institutionalised to varying degrees over time. In the eyes of the people, or in the eyes of
some people, these orders may hold legitimacy equal to a functioning state apparatus (e.g. the quasi-state maintained by UNITA within parts of Angolan territory from the late 60's until the early 2000's).
Is a functioning state that uses coercive repression of certain groups as its primary tool in maintaining order
more legitimate than a rebel organisation which adminsters a shadow-state (and may well use similar tactics)? The key question is 'in whose eyes'? The international community will recognise the former as sovereign and legitimate, while the latter is deemed illegitimate - an insurgency or seperatist movement. But in the eyes of people living in the region -- whose political authority do they recognise?
I'd say the difference between warlordism, quasi-states and Westphalian states is only one of degrees of separation along a continuum of institutionalised social order and control.
Bakonyi and Stuvoy:
The legitimacy of a social order of violence encompasses ideas, economic and power interests, as well as the use of force. In addition to examining the loyalties of the combatants to the elites, the discursive process of justifying and legitimising the use of force within a specific order must be studied. The specific legitimacy of a certain order is particularly important because it informs about the level of institutionalisation of the order of violence. This is the key to understanding the level of stability of a specific order.
The comprehension of the legitimacy of specific forms of authority in violent conflicts enhances the understanding of conflict dynamism because it provides insight excluded in the exclusively rational economic focus in concepts such as predation and patron-client relations. An interest in the form of social embeddedness of violent actors and their strategies also raises new challenges for conflict resolution. Focusing on the legitimacy of social orders of violence might represent an avenue for the future stabilisation of such orders as social orders of peace, thus making alternative forms of political community conceivable.
And on that note of optimism I'll end this monologue.