Dictionary Definition
oligarchy n : a political system governed by a
few people
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- (UK): /ˈɒlɪɡɑːki/, /"QlIgA:ki/
- (US): , /ˈɑːlɪˌɡɑrki/, /"A:lI%gArki/ or
- (US): , /ˈoʊlɪˌɡɑrki/, /"oUlI%gArki/
Noun
- A government run by only a few, often the wealthy.
- Those who make up an oligarchic government.
- A state ruled by such a government.
Related terms
Translations
Government by only a few
- Catalan: oligarquia
- Dutch: oligarchie
- Finnish: harvainvalta, oligarkia
- French: oligarchie
- German: Oligarchie
- Hebrew: אוליגרכיה
- Persian: جرگهسالاری (jarge-salari)
- Spanish: oligarquía
Those who make up an oligarchic government
- Catalan: oligarquia
- Dutch: oligarchie
- Finnish: oligarkit, oligarkia, valtaeliitti
- French: oligarchie
- Hebrew: אוליגרכיה
- Persian: جرگهسالاران (jarge-salaran)
- Spanish: oligarquía
State ruled by such a government
- Finnish: oligarkia
- German: Oligarchie
Extensive Definition
Oligarchy (Greek ,
Oligarkhía) is a form of
government where political
power effectively rests with a small elite segment of
society (whether distinguished by wealth, family or military
powers). The word oligarchy is from the Greek words for "few" (
olígon) and "rule" ( arkho). Compare with autocracy (rule by one person)
and democracy (rule by
the majority).
Oligarchy, aristocracy, and plutocracy
Historically, many oligarchies openly gave the political power to a minority group, sometimes arguing that this was an aristocracy ("organization by the 'best' and the 'brightest'"). Such states were often controlled by powerful families whose children were raised and mentored to be heirs of the power of the oligarchy. However, this power may also not be exercised openly, the oligarchs preferring to remain "the power behind the throne", exerting control through economic means. Although Aristotle pioneered the use of the term as a synonym for rule by the rich, for which the exact term is plutocracy, oligarchy is not always a rule by wealth, as oligarchs can simply be a privileged group.Oligarchy vs. monarchy
Early societies may have become oligarchies as an outgrowth of an alliance between rival tribal chieftains or as the result of a caste system. Oligarchies can often become instruments of transformation, by insisting that monarchs or dictators share power, thereby opening the door to power-sharing by other elements of society (while oligarchy means "the rule of the few," monarchy means "the rule of the one"). One example of power-sharing from one person to a larger group of persons occurred when English nobles banded together in 1215 to force a reluctant King John of England to sign Magna Carta, a tacit recognition both of King John's waning political power and of the existence of an incipient oligarchy (the nobility). As English society continued to grow and develop, Magna Carta was repeatedly revised (1216, 1217, and 1225), guaranteeing greater rights to greater numbers of people, thus setting the stage for English constitutional monarchy.Oligarchies may also evolve into more autocratic or monarchist forms of
government, sometimes as the result of one family gaining
ascendancy over the others. Many of the European
monarchies established during the late Middle Ages
began in this way.
Examples of oligarchies
Examples include Sparta (excluding
the Helots,
who were the majority of the population, from voting), the First
French Republic government under the Directory,
and the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (only the nobility could vote).
A modern example of oligarchy could be seen in South Africa
during the 20th century. Here, the basic characteristics of
oligarchy are particularly easy to observe, since the South African
form of oligarchy was based on
race. After the Second Boer
War, a tacit agreement was reached between English- and
Afrikaans-speaking
whites. Together, they made up about twenty percent of the
population, but this small percentage ruled the vast native
population. Whites had access to virtually all the educational and trade opportunities, and they
proceeded to deny this to the black majority even further than
before. Although this process had been going on since the mid-18th
century, after 1948 it became
official government policy and became known worldwide as apartheid. This lasted until
the arrival of democracy in South Africa in
1994,
punctuated by the transition to a democratically-elected government
dominated by the black majority.
Russia has been
labeled an oligarchy because of the power of certain individuals,
the oligarchs,
who gained great wealth after the fall of Communism.
Critics have argued that this happened in illegitimate ways and was
due to corruption.
Capitalism as a
social system is sometimes described as an oligarchy. Critics argue
that in a capitalist society, power - economic, cultural and
political - rests in the hands of the capitalist class. Communist
states have also been seen as oligarchies, being ruled by a class
with special privileges, the nomenklatura.
The concept of an "oligarchic democracy" is one
which some scholars attribute to Ancient Rome and the United
States. Marxist Ellen
Meiksins Wood writes, that it "conveys a truth about U.S.
politics every bit as telling as its application to ancient Rome.
It is no accident that the Founding Fathers of the U.S. Republic
looked to Roman models for inspiration in making the Federalist
case, adopting Roman names as pseudonyms and conceiving of
themselves as latterday Catos, forming a natural aristocracy of
republican virtue. (Americans today still have a representative
body called the Senate, and their republic is still watched over by
the Roman eagle.) Faced with the distasteful specter of democracy,
they sought ways to redefine that unpalatable concept to
accommodate aristocratic rule, producing a hybrid, "representative
democracy," which was clearly meant to achieve an effect similar to
the ancient Roman idea of the "mixed constitution," in fact, an
"oligarchic 'democracy."' However, the constitution and state laws
has since been modified, with the removal of the original property
requirements for voting, as well as giving the vote to women and
blacks.http://www.infoplease.com/timelines/voting.html
The Iron Law of Oligarchy
Some authors such as Vilfredo Pareto, Gaetano Mosca, Thomas R. Dye, and Robert Michels, believe that any political system eventually evolves into an oligarchy. This theory is called the "iron law of oligarchy". According to this school of thought, modern democracies should be considered as elected oligarchies. In these systems, actual differences between viable political rivals are small, the oligarchic elite impose strict limits on what constitutes an 'acceptable' and 'respectable' political position, and politicians' careers depend heavily on unelected economic and media elites.The historian Spencer R.
Weart in his book Never at
War argues that oligarchies rarely make war with one
another.
See also
Government terms:Relevant authors:
References
- Ostwald, M. Oligarchia: The Development of a Constitutional Form in Ancient Greece (Historia Einzelschirften; 144). Stuttgart: Steiner, 2000 (ISBN 3-515-07680-8).
External links
- Online Text: Leonard Whibley, Greek Oligarchies: Their Character and Organisation (1896), still the only full-scale treatment of oligarchy in Classical Greece.
oligarchy in Bulgarian: Олигархия
oligarchy in Catalan: Oligarquia
oligarchy in Czech: Oligarchie
oligarchy in Welsh: Oligarchiaeth
oligarchy in Danish: Oligarki
oligarchy in German: Oligarchie
oligarchy in Estonian: Oligarhia
oligarchy in Modern Greek (1453-):
Ολιγαρχία
oligarchy in Spanish: Oligarquía
oligarchy in Esperanto: Oligarkio
oligarchy in Basque: Oligarkia
oligarchy in French: Oligarchie
oligarchy in Galician: Oligarquía
oligarchy in Korean: 과두정
oligarchy in Croatian: Oligarhija
oligarchy in Indonesian: Oligarki
oligarchy in Italian: Oligarchia
oligarchy in Hebrew: אוליגרכיה
oligarchy in Georgian: ოლიგარქია
oligarchy in Haitian: Oligachi
oligarchy in Kurdish: Olîgarşî
oligarchy in Latin: Oligarchia
oligarchy in Latvian: Oligarhija
oligarchy in Lithuanian: Oligarchija
oligarchy in Limburgan: Oligarchie
oligarchy in Malay (macrolanguage):
Oligarki
oligarchy in Dutch: Oligarchie
oligarchy in Japanese: 寡頭制
oligarchy in Norwegian: Oligarki
oligarchy in Norwegian Nynorsk: Oligarki
oligarchy in Polish: Oligarchia
oligarchy in Portuguese: Oligarquia
oligarchy in Romanian: Oligarhie
oligarchy in Russian: Олигархия
oligarchy in Simple English: Oligarchy
oligarchy in Slovak: Oligarchia
oligarchy in Slovenian: Oligarhija
oligarchy in Serbian: Олигархија
oligarchy in Serbo-Croatian: Oligarhija
oligarchy in Finnish: Oligarkia
oligarchy in Swedish: Oligarki
oligarchy in Tagalog: Oligarkiya
oligarchy in Thai: คณาธิปไตย
oligarchy in Vietnamese: Oligarchy
oligarchy in Turkish: Oligarşi
oligarchy in Ukrainian: Олігархія
oligarchy in Venetian: Oligarchia
oligarchy in Yiddish: אליגאראכיע
oligarchy in Chinese:
寡头政治