Difference between revisions of "Parapolitics"

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|description=A system or practice of politics in which accountability is consciously diminished.
 
|description=A system or practice of politics in which accountability is consciously diminished.
 
}}
 
}}
==Original Usage==
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'''Parapolitics''' is used to describe either covert political activity that is hidden from the public or a complete (de facto) political system, typically comprising elements of the military and intelligence apparatus, hidden from the public; political actions of subterfuge, secrecy, and deceit; and is increasingly used in discussions on democracy to describe the behaviour of the [[deep state]] (i.e. coalitions of institutions and corporations who operate above or outside of the elected government).
The term '''parapolitics''' was first conceived and elaborated by Professor [[Raghavan Iyer]] of [[Oxford University]] in his work ''Parapolitics: Toward the City of Man.'' It proposes a more all-encompassing conception than that of the traditional politics of stability, power and self-preservation.
 
 
 
In Professor Iyer's conception, parapolitics is best understood as the activity of continually rethinking the foundations as well as the frontiers of political principles, systems and issues. In this sense, the ‘parapolitical’ transcends conventional politics while still being reflected in it.
 
 
 
His dialectic of parapolitical engagement calls for establishing critical distance and a clear understanding the potential costs of commitment - mainly in terms of Establishment disapproval.
 
 
 
<blockquote>
 
''"Parapolitics signifies the imaginative application of seminal ideas vitalizing political theory and practice; the elaboration of fundamental principles into paradigms of relationships among persons and between civil means and humane ends; the quest for political understanding and action based upon expanding self-awareness; and the ever-receding perspective of ideals rooted in the ethics, metaphysics and psychology of self-transcendence."'' - Raghavan Iyer, ''Parapolitics: Toward the City of Man'', Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1979, p. 27)
 
</blockquote>
 
  
==Peter Dale Scott's usage==
 
 
'''[[Peter Dale Scott]] employs the term "parapolitics," in a completely different manner, as a manifestation of "[[Deep Politics]]":'''
 
'''[[Peter Dale Scott]] employs the term "parapolitics," in a completely different manner, as a manifestation of "[[Deep Politics]]":'''
 +
{{QB|''"...the investigation of '''parapolitics''', which I defined (with the [[CIA]] in mind) as a 'system or practice of politics in which accountability is consciously diminished.'...I still see value in this definition and mode of analysis. But '''parapolitics''' as thus defined is itself too narrowly conscious and intentional... it describes at best only an intervening layer of the irrationality under our political culture's rational surface. Thus I now refer to '''parapolitics''' as only one manifestation of deep politics, all those political practices and arrangements, deliberate or not, which are usually repressed rather than acknowledged."''}}
  
<blockquote>
+
==Original Usage==
''"...the investigation of '''parapolitics''', which I defined (with the [[CIA]] in mind) as a 'system or practice of politics in which accountability is consciously diminished.'...I still see value in this definition and mode of analysis. But '''parapolitics''' as thus defined is itself too narrowly conscious and intentional... it describes at best only an intervening layer of the irrationality under our political culture's rational surface. Thus I now refer to '''parapolitics''' as only one manifestation of deep politics, all those political practices and arrangements, deliberate or not, which are usually repressed rather than acknowledged."''
+
The term '''parapolitics''' was first used by Professor [[Raghavan Iyer]] of Oxford University in his 1979 work ''Parapolitics: Toward the City of Man.'' It proposes a more all-encompassing conception than that of the traditional politics of stability, power and self-preservation.  
</blockquote>
 
 
 
The term is used to describe either covert political activity that is hidden from the public or a complete (de facto) political system, typically comprising elements of the military and intelligence apparatus, hidden from the public; political actions of subterfuge, secrecy, and deceit; and is increasingly used in discussions on democracy to describe coalitions of institutions and corporations who operate above or outside of the elected government.
 
  
''It is this latter definition that has become the more standard and well understood one.''
+
In Professor Iyer's conception, parapolitics is best understood as the activity of continually rethinking the foundations as well as the frontiers of political principles, systems and issues. In this sense, the ‘parapolitical’ transcends conventional politics while still being reflected in it. His dialectic of parapolitical engagement calls for establishing critical distance and a clear understanding the potential costs of commitment - mainly in terms of Establishment disapproval.
 +
{{QB|''"Parapolitics signifies the imaginative application of seminal ideas vitalizing political theory and practice; the elaboration of fundamental principles into paradigms of relationships among persons and between civil means and humane ends; the quest for political understanding and action based upon expanding self-awareness; and the ever-receding perspective of ideals rooted in the ethics, metaphysics and psychology of self-transcendence."''<br/>
 +
Raghavan Iyer<ref>, ''Parapolitics: Toward the City of Man'', Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1979, p. 27</ref>}}
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==

Revision as of 16:20, 6 May 2014

Concept.png ParapoliticsRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Interest ofLobster Magazine
A system or practice of politics in which accountability is consciously diminished.

Parapolitics is used to describe either covert political activity that is hidden from the public or a complete (de facto) political system, typically comprising elements of the military and intelligence apparatus, hidden from the public; political actions of subterfuge, secrecy, and deceit; and is increasingly used in discussions on democracy to describe the behaviour of the deep state (i.e. coalitions of institutions and corporations who operate above or outside of the elected government).

Peter Dale Scott employs the term "parapolitics," in a completely different manner, as a manifestation of "Deep Politics":

"...the investigation of parapolitics, which I defined (with the CIA in mind) as a 'system or practice of politics in which accountability is consciously diminished.'...I still see value in this definition and mode of analysis. But parapolitics as thus defined is itself too narrowly conscious and intentional... it describes at best only an intervening layer of the irrationality under our political culture's rational surface. Thus I now refer to parapolitics as only one manifestation of deep politics, all those political practices and arrangements, deliberate or not, which are usually repressed rather than acknowledged."

Original Usage

The term parapolitics was first used by Professor Raghavan Iyer of Oxford University in his 1979 work Parapolitics: Toward the City of Man. It proposes a more all-encompassing conception than that of the traditional politics of stability, power and self-preservation.

In Professor Iyer's conception, parapolitics is best understood as the activity of continually rethinking the foundations as well as the frontiers of political principles, systems and issues. In this sense, the ‘parapolitical’ transcends conventional politics while still being reflected in it. His dialectic of parapolitical engagement calls for establishing critical distance and a clear understanding the potential costs of commitment - mainly in terms of Establishment disapproval.

"Parapolitics signifies the imaginative application of seminal ideas vitalizing political theory and practice; the elaboration of fundamental principles into paradigms of relationships among persons and between civil means and humane ends; the quest for political understanding and action based upon expanding self-awareness; and the ever-receding perspective of ideals rooted in the ethics, metaphysics and psychology of self-transcendence."
Raghavan Iyer[1]

External links

  • , Parapolitics: Toward the City of Man, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1979, p. 27