Conceptualizing legitimacy: What to learn from the controversies related to an “essentially contested concept”

Based on a genealogy of the concept of Legitimacy, the goal of the paper is to develop a proposal that unites normative-theoretical and empirical approaches and hence reconciles two different conceptual-theoretical camps in legitimacy research. Legitimacy is a core concept in Political Science that...

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Main Authors: Claudia Wiesner, Philipp Harfst
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Political Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpos.2022.867756/full
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author Claudia Wiesner
Philipp Harfst
author_facet Claudia Wiesner
Philipp Harfst
author_sort Claudia Wiesner
collection DOAJ
description Based on a genealogy of the concept of Legitimacy, the goal of the paper is to develop a proposal that unites normative-theoretical and empirical approaches and hence reconciles two different conceptual-theoretical camps in legitimacy research. Legitimacy is a core concept in Political Science that relates to fundamental questions of politics, polity and policy–the relation between rulers and ruled, the properties of a political system, its democratic quality, the rule of law, and its policy output. However, in academia, no consensus has evolved on the conceptual and empirical core of legitimacy, it is still essentially contested. One main reason for this is that a concept such as legitimacy is not only a tool for analysis, but can also become an object of academic controversy itself, as researchers give different answers to key questions related to conceptualizing it. This is why academic controversies on a concept highlight key issues, questions and dimensions of understanding, defining, and operationalising it—which is also the case for legitimacy. The paper therefore recollects the main controversies around the concept of legitimacy since the 1950's by tracing a genealogy of legitimacy in the Social Sciences. A genealogy is a methodological tool in intellectual and conceptual history. Different from a classical literature review, a genealogy summarizes the main lines and traditions of thinking on a concept, the key controversies, predominant understandings, and crucial issues of conceptualizing it. In the conceptual debates on legitimacy in Political Science, the core controversy is the one between normative-theoretical and empirical approaches. Based on the genealogy, we develop a proposal for conceptualizing legitimacy that enables to reconcile the normative-theoretical and empirical camps in legitimacy research.
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spelling doaj.art-b2235eefa54445508d0ef30176ff2ebc2022-12-22T03:28:15ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Political Science2673-31452022-10-01410.3389/fpos.2022.867756867756Conceptualizing legitimacy: What to learn from the controversies related to an “essentially contested concept”Claudia Wiesner0Philipp Harfst1Department of Social and Cultural Sciences, Fulda University of Applied Sciences, Fulda, GermanyDepartment of Democracy Studies, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Göttingen, GermanyBased on a genealogy of the concept of Legitimacy, the goal of the paper is to develop a proposal that unites normative-theoretical and empirical approaches and hence reconciles two different conceptual-theoretical camps in legitimacy research. Legitimacy is a core concept in Political Science that relates to fundamental questions of politics, polity and policy–the relation between rulers and ruled, the properties of a political system, its democratic quality, the rule of law, and its policy output. However, in academia, no consensus has evolved on the conceptual and empirical core of legitimacy, it is still essentially contested. One main reason for this is that a concept such as legitimacy is not only a tool for analysis, but can also become an object of academic controversy itself, as researchers give different answers to key questions related to conceptualizing it. This is why academic controversies on a concept highlight key issues, questions and dimensions of understanding, defining, and operationalising it—which is also the case for legitimacy. The paper therefore recollects the main controversies around the concept of legitimacy since the 1950's by tracing a genealogy of legitimacy in the Social Sciences. A genealogy is a methodological tool in intellectual and conceptual history. Different from a classical literature review, a genealogy summarizes the main lines and traditions of thinking on a concept, the key controversies, predominant understandings, and crucial issues of conceptualizing it. In the conceptual debates on legitimacy in Political Science, the core controversy is the one between normative-theoretical and empirical approaches. Based on the genealogy, we develop a proposal for conceptualizing legitimacy that enables to reconcile the normative-theoretical and empirical camps in legitimacy research.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpos.2022.867756/fulllegitimacyconceptsgenealogynormative-theoreticalempirical-analyticalmethods
spellingShingle Claudia Wiesner
Philipp Harfst
Conceptualizing legitimacy: What to learn from the controversies related to an “essentially contested concept”
Frontiers in Political Science
legitimacy
concepts
genealogy
normative-theoretical
empirical-analytical
methods
title Conceptualizing legitimacy: What to learn from the controversies related to an “essentially contested concept”
title_full Conceptualizing legitimacy: What to learn from the controversies related to an “essentially contested concept”
title_fullStr Conceptualizing legitimacy: What to learn from the controversies related to an “essentially contested concept”
title_full_unstemmed Conceptualizing legitimacy: What to learn from the controversies related to an “essentially contested concept”
title_short Conceptualizing legitimacy: What to learn from the controversies related to an “essentially contested concept”
title_sort conceptualizing legitimacy what to learn from the controversies related to an essentially contested concept
topic legitimacy
concepts
genealogy
normative-theoretical
empirical-analytical
methods
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpos.2022.867756/full
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