Power can be seen as the ability to influence or control others. It has three dimensions: decision-making power, non-decision-making power, and ideological power. There are different types of power including knowledge power, military power, ideological power, distributional power, and collective power. Power often has consequences for those wielding it and those being targeted, such as punishment, prevention of desires being fulfilled, or loss of power if it is overused without gaining more influence over others.
Power can be seen as the ability to influence or control others. It has three dimensions: decision-making power, non-decision-making power, and ideological power. There are different types of power including knowledge power, military power, ideological power, distributional power, and collective power. Power often has consequences for those wielding it and those being targeted, such as punishment, prevention of desires being fulfilled, or loss of power if it is overused without gaining more influence over others.
Power can be seen as the ability to influence or control others. It has three dimensions: decision-making power, non-decision-making power, and ideological power. There are different types of power including knowledge power, military power, ideological power, distributional power, and collective power. Power often has consequences for those wielding it and those being targeted, such as punishment, prevention of desires being fulfilled, or loss of power if it is overused without gaining more influence over others.
Power can be seen as the ability to influence or control others. It has three dimensions: decision-making power, non-decision-making power, and ideological power. There are different types of power including knowledge power, military power, ideological power, distributional power, and collective power. Power often has consequences for those wielding it and those being targeted, such as punishment, prevention of desires being fulfilled, or loss of power if it is overused without gaining more influence over others.
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POWER
Nature Dimension Types and Consequences
What is Power? • In social and politics, power is the capacity of an individual to influence the conduct (behavior) of others. The term “authority” is often used for power that is perceived as legitimate by the social structure. Power can be seen as evil or unjust. Nature of Power • Power implies the ability to influence or control others or to get things done by others. Naturally power relates to the relationship or interaction between two or among more than two elements or actors. So power always viewed in the background of relationship. Power is a conditional concept. Power is an ability to command service from others. But this ability, depends in some measure upon certain conditions and if the conditions are not fulfilled properly power cannot function. Power is not something which is permanently fixed. It is subject to change and it has source. If the source dries up power generation or enhancement will stop. Mere existence of sources cannot cause the rise of power. The holder of power must have the ability to use or utilize the source of power. All these conditions establish the fact that power is conditional. Dimensions of Power The three Dimensions of power • Decision making power is the most public of three dimensions. Analysis of this “face” focuses on policy preferences revealed through political action. • Non decision making power is that which sets the agenda in debates and make certain issues. Unacceptable for discussions in “legitimate” public forum. Adding this faces gives a tow dimensional view of power allowing the analyst to examine both current and potential issues, expanding the focus on observable conflict to those types that might be observed overtly or covertly. • Ideological power allows one to influence people’s wishes and thoughts, even making them want things opposed to their own self interest. This third dimension as a “thoroughgoing critique” of the behavioural focus of the first two dimensions, supplementing and correcting the shortcoming of previous views, allowing the analyst to include both latent and observable conflicts. Full critique of power should include both subjective interest and those “real” interest held by those excluded by the political process. Types of Power • Knowledge Power To Foucault (19sixty9), power is intimately linked with knowledge. Power and knowledge produce one another. He saw knowledge as a means of “keeping tabs” on people and controlling them. • Military Power It involves the use of physical coercion. Warfare has always played a major role in politics. Modern mass military systems developed into bureaucratic organizations and significantly change the nature of organizing and fighting wars. Few groups in society base their power purely on force or military might. • Ideological Power it involves power over ideas and beliefs, for example, are communism, facism and some varieties of nationalism. These types ideologies are frequently oppositional to dominant institutions and play an important role in the organization of devotes into sects and parties. According to Michael Mann (198six), there are two types of power: Distributional and collective. • Distributional Power it is a power over others. It is the ability of individuals to get others to help them pursue their own goals. It is held by individuals. • Collective Power It is exercised by social groups. It may be exercised by one social group over another. Power and Consequences Power and consequences are often closely related. The basic principle is that a person with power has the ability to create consequences for the target person, who takes these consequences into my account when they are deciding whether to comply with a request or refuse it. • Punishment a very common attribute of power is that the wielder of power has the ability to coerce the target into compliance through the threat of some kind of punishment. The basic transaction is hence ‘Do as I say or else I will harm you in some way’. The person is then faced with the choice of obedience or suffering the consequences that the powerful person can create. Punishment can take many forms. In a business setting it can be as direct as being sacked or less obvious in the way that the target person may be given work that is less desirable than they might get if they complied with the request. • Prevention some people do not have the power to directly punish, though they may have the ability to withhold something or prevent the target person getting what they want. The transaction here is “Do I say or else you will get what you want”. • Power loss there is also consequences for the person wielding the power. Sometimes use of power of power leads to gaining more power as the dominated person becomes cowed and hence easier to persuade in future. Sometimes the use of power has no effect on the balance of power in the future. And sometimes there is negative consequences for the person using the power, that in using power it is spent, like money, and may not be easy to regain. An example of losing power when it is used is where you have helped a person in the past and they feel obliged to comply when you ask something of them in return. When they agree to your request, they then obligation has been discharged and hence you have less power over them. “ THANKS FOR LISTENING ” Reporters: John Russel Pasa Alvin Hayao