User:BaileyPoland/politicalcapitalsandbox
Political capital is a metaphor used in political theory to conceptualize the accumulation of resources and power built through relationships, trust, goodwill, and influence between politicians or parties and other stakeholders, such as constituents. Political capital can be understood as a type of currency used to mobilize voters, spent on policy reform, or accomplish other political goals. Although not a literal form of capital, political capital is often described as a type of credit, or a resource that can be banked, spent or misspent, invested, lost, and saved.[1]
Origins of Political Capital
Pierre Bourdieu is often credited with developing the most popular theories of political capital (as well as social capital) in his 1991 book Language and Symbolic Power. However, the concept of political capital was introduced to political theory in 1961 by American political scientist Edward C. Banfield in his book Political Influence. Banfield described political capital as a "stock of influence" which might be built "by 'buying' a bit here and there from the many small 'owners' who were endowed with it by the constitution-makers" — that is, political capital can be used for types of exchange between politicians or between politicians and voters.[2] Like money, Banfield says, political capital must be spent and saved wisely or a politician would be "out of business" before long.[2]
Bourdieu's theory of political capital further elaborates on the metaphor of money and the concept of capital itself. In "The Forms of Capital," Bourdieu defines capital as "accumulated labor (in its materialized form or its ‘incorporated,’ embodied form) which, when appropriated…by agents or groups of agents, enables them to appropriate social energy in the form of reified or living labor.”[3] Political capital, then, is how symbolically understood capital functions within a political system: it is a form of credit accumulated by politicians, which can be used to accomplish other goals, such as the work required to pass legislation or achieve reelection.
- ^ Kjaer, Ulrik (2013). "Local Political Leadership: The Art of Circulating Political Capital". Local Government Studies. 39 (2): 253–272. doi:10.1080/03003930.2012.751022.
- ^ a b Banfield, Edward (1961). Political Influence. The Free Press. pp. 241–242.
- ^ Bourdieu, Pierre (1986). "The Forms of Capital". Handbook of Theory and Research for the Sociology of Education. p. 81.
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