Oligarchy: Difference between revisions

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'''Oligarchy''' is a form of [[government]] in which the political power is centralized within a small group or faction of a few persons, called '''oligarchs'''. The ruling faction is typically, though not necessarily, an economically privileged group. When the oligarchs are nobles, it is called an [[aristocracy]]; when they are men of wealth, it is called a [[plutocracy]].
'''Oligarchy''' is a form of [[government]] in which the political power is centralized within a small group or faction of a few persons, called '''oligarchs'''. The ruling faction is typically, though not necessarily, an economically privileged group. Oligarchy is a broad category with subtypes defined according to the composition of the oligarch class. For example, when the oligarchs are nobles, it is called an [[aristocracy]]; when they are men of wealth, it is called a [[plutocracy]].


==Early examples of oligarchy==
==Early examples of oligarchy==

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Oligarchy is a form of government in which the political power is centralized within a small group or faction of a few persons, called oligarchs. The ruling faction is typically, though not necessarily, an economically privileged group. Oligarchy is a broad category with subtypes defined according to the composition of the oligarch class. For example, when the oligarchs are nobles, it is called an aristocracy; when they are men of wealth, it is called a plutocracy.

Early examples of oligarchy

Historically, many city-states of ancient Greece were oligarchies. The most prominent was Sparta, which was ruled by the military elite. Other examples include the Etruscans who ruled Italy in pre-Roman era, the Roman Republic, and the Italian city-states, including Venice and Genoa, during the Middle Ages.[1]

Modern usage

The United States has sometimes been accused of being oligarchical in that the political power is perceived as being essentially manipulated by the wealthy and big businesses.[2] The PRC regime in China is sometimes referred as an oligarchy that a small cadre of Communist party leaders dictatorially rule the country.[3] The Soviet Union's ruling class, the "nomenklatura", was in nature oligarchical. Multinational corporations have also been accused as constituting a global oligarchy.[4]

Iron law of oligarchy

The German sociologist Robert Michels formulated the famous "Iron law of oligarchy", that all political and organizational institutions, no matter what structure they are established as, will eventually devolve into oligarchies.[5]

References