SYSTEM TYPES II

Table 10.1 Developmental Phases

Area   Agrarian Preindustrial Industrial Advanced Technological
Social Communal; high integration;religiosecular elite; extended family; large rural population; ethnic-geographic cleavages; parochial loyalties

 

Mainly rural; extended and nuclear families;emerging urban migration; differentiation of religious and secular elites; regional ethnic, class cleavages Nuclear family; high mobility; atomistic; secular belief systems (rationality); high levels of education; multiple identifications Lower nuclear family cohesion; high specialization; high mobility; widespread higher education; high suburban, low rural population; large professional and technocratic groups
Economic Subsistence agriculture; village markets; high proportion of GNP in agriculture; high proportion of labor force in agriculture Subsistence and commercial agriculture; monetarized economy; highly labor-intensive industry; integration into national markets; more blue-collar labor Highly industrial; substantial service sector; capital-intensive industry; high use of credit; little or no subsistence agriculture Service sector exceeds industrial sector; increasing emphasis on science and advanced technology in both sectors
Political Leadership by traditional elites' patron-client networks; low participation' traditionally legitimacy; inherited status; politics follows regional, class, ethnic cleavages Authoritarian (single-party or military) government; patron-client networks; some ideologically mobilized parties; low participation (except in mobilized systems); traditional and modern cleavages; legitimacy often charismatic Pluralistic single or competitive parties; class cleavages more important; high mobilization participation; rational-legal authority Pluralist single or competitive parties; high political awareness and participation; increased concern of post-material values and conflicts; decentralization of authority to specialized agencies

Homepage