Full Text

Legitimacy

Lisa Troyer


Subject Law
Sociology » Stratification and Inequality

Key-Topics power

DOI: 10.1111/b.9781405124331.2007.x


Extract

Legitimacy is defined as a state of appropriateness ascribed to an actor, object, system, structure, process, or action resulting from its integration with institutionalized norms, values, and beliefs. It is a topic of longstanding interest across the spectrum of sociological phenomena and levels of analysis. Legitimacy is a multilevel concept, as implied by the term “actor,” which may refer to individuals, groups, organizations, nation-states, and world systems. It appears as a core concept in diverse areas of sociological inquiry including (but not limited to) social psychology, stratification, deviance, collective action, organizations, political systems, law, and science. At its core, legitimacy involves a sense of appropriateness that is accorded to an entity. That is, a legitimate entity is one that we view as suited to its social environment and, as a result, deserving of support by other entities in the environment. The sense that an entity is suited to its environment arises from its perceived consistency with the institutionalized norms, values, and beliefs in which the entity is embedded. The institutionalized character of norms, values, and beliefs is a critical element of legitimacy. Institutionalized criteria are beyond the discretion of single actors. Because no single actor is perceived as dictating the norms, values, and beliefs that guide a social system (although ... log in or subscribe to read full text

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