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Patron—Client Relations as a Model of Structuring Social Exchange

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 June 2009

S. N. Eisenstadt
Affiliation:
The Eliezer kaplan School of Economics and Political Sciences and the Truman Research Institute
Louis Roniger
Affiliation:
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Extract

The study of patronage and of patron-client relations has come lately to the fore in anthropology, political science and sociology, and has exerted a great fascination for scholars in these spheres. From a topic of relatively marginal concern it has become a central one, closely connected to basic theoretical problems and controversies in all the social sciences.

Type
Fresh Applications of Familiar Models
Copyright
Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1980

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References

The origins of this paper are in a seminar on Comparative Patron-Client Relations in the Department of Sociology of The Hebrew University, given in 1974–75 by S. N. Eisenstadt and J. Azmon, in a framework of seminars on Comparative Civilizations. Two papers based on this seminar have already been published: Burkolter, V., The Patronage System, Theoretical Remarks, Basel, Social Strategies, 1976Google Scholar; and Brumer, Anita, ‘O Sistema Paternalista no Brasil,” Revista do Instituto de Filosofia e Ciencias Humanas da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sol, IV (1976), 5779.Google Scholar Prof. J.S. Coleman of the University of Chicago and Prof. R. Breiger of Harvard University have commented in detail on earlier drafts of this paper, and problems have been discussed by S.N. Eisenstadt with Patti Cox and Beth Hevens at Harvard. Preliminary presentations of this paper have been made by the senior author at Cambridge University and the University of Manchester. He is greatly indebted to the discussions there.

1 Thus in anthropology they were connected with the study of such phenomena as ritual kinship or friendship, and anthropologists tended to concentrate on the institutionalized types of personal patron-client relationship, above all in tribal settings or in small rural communities. Among the best-known studies are Mintz, S.W. and Wolf, E.R., ‘An Analysis of Ritual Coparenthood (Compadrazgo),”Google ScholarSouthwestern Journal of Anthropology, 6:4 (Winter 1950). 341–68CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Foster, G.M., ‘Cofradia and Compadrazgo in Spain,”Google Scholaribid., 9:1 (Spring 1953), 1–28; Tegnaeus, H., Blood Brothers, New York, Philosophical Library, 1952Google Scholar; Ishino, I., ‘The Oyabun-Kobun: A Japanese Ritual Kinship Institution,” American Anthropologist, 55:1 (1953). 695707CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Pitt-Rivers, J., The People of the Sierra, London, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1954Google Scholar; idem.Ritual and Kinship in Spain,” Transactions of the New York Academy of Sciences, Series 2:20 (1958), 424–31Google Scholar; Kenny, M., A Spanish Tapestry: Town and Country in Castile, New York, Harper and Row, 1966 (1961)Google Scholar; Hutchinson, H.W., Village and Plantation Life in Northeastern Brazil, Seattle, University of Washington Press, 1957Google Scholar; Freed, S.H., ‘Fictive Kinship in a North Indian Village,” Ethnology, 2 (1963), 86104CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Foster, G.M.. ‘The Dyadic Contract: A Model for the Social Structure of a Mexican Peasant Village,” American Anthropologist, 63:6 (1961), 1173–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and idem. ‘The Dyadic Contract in Tzintzuntzan II: Patron-Client Relationship,” ibid., 65:6 (1963), 1280–94. In sociology, the study of patronage was closely related to ‘primary” groups and relations in more formalized settings such as bureaucracies. See the Hawthorne Studies in the 1930s: Roethlisberger, F.J. and Dickson, W.J., Management and the Worker: An Account of a Research Program, conducted by the Western Electric Co., Hawthorne Works, Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1970 (1939)Google Scholar; Warner, L.W. and Lunt, P.S., The Social Life of a Modern Community, New Haven, Yale University Press, 1941Google Scholar; Whyte, W.F., Street Corner Society: The Social Structure of an Italian Slum, Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1958Google Scholar; Shils, E., ‘Primordial, Personal, Sacred and Civil Ties,”Google Scholar in idem.Center and Periphery, Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1975, 111–26Google ScholarPubMed; idem. 'Primary Groups in American Army,” in ibid., 384–405; Katz, E. and Lazarfeld, P.F., Personal Influence, Glencoe, IL, The Free Press, 1955Google Scholar. In political science the study of patronage was initially concentrated on political machines and ‘bossism” in more developed societies, gradually extending to the study of corruption in developing countries. See for instance Carmen, H.J. and Luthin, R.J., Lincoln and the Patronage, New York, 1943Google Scholar; Sorauf, F.J., ‘Patronage and Party,” Midwest Journal of Political Science, 3:2 (05 1959)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Wilson, J.Q., ‘The Economy of Patronage,” Journal of Political Economy, 69:4 (08. 1961), 369–80CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Mandelbaum, S., Boss Tweed's New York, New York, Wiley and Sons, 1965Google Scholar; Banfield, E. and Wilson, J.Q., City Politics, Cambridge, Harvard University Press and M.I.T. Press, 1963Google Scholar. In the literature on those phenom- ena in developing countries at this stage see Wraith, R. and Simkins, E., Corruption in Developing Countries, London, G. Allen and Unwin, 1963Google Scholar; Smith, M.G., ‘Historical and Cultural Conditions of Political Corruption among the Hausa,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 6:1 (01. 1964), 164–94CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Greenstone, J.D., ‘Corruption and Self-interest in Kampala and Nairobi,”Google Scholaribid., 8:1 (Jan. 1966), 199–210; Nash, M., ‘Party Building in Upper Burma,” Asian Survey, 3:4 (04 1963), 197202CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and idem, The Golden Road to Modernity, New York, Wiley and Sons, 1965Google Scholar; Lande, C.H., Leaders, Factions and Parties: The Structure of Philippine Politics, New Haven, Yale University Press, Southeast Asian Studies, 1965.Google Scholar

2 For illustrations of the conceptualization of patron-client relationships since the late sixties see for instance Wolf, E., “Kinship, Friendship, and Patron-Client Relationships in Complex Societies.” in Banton, M., ed., The Social Anthropology of Complex Societies, London, Tavistock. 1966Google Scholar, Monographs, A.S.A., 122Google Scholar; Weingrod, A., ‘Patrons, Patronage, and Political Parties,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 7:4 (10. 1968), 377400CrossRefGoogle Scholar; the issue of Sociologische Gids that deals with patron-client relations. 16:6 (11–12. 1969)Google Scholar; Lemarchand, R. and Legg, K., ‘Political Clientelism and Development: A Preliminary Analysis,” Comparative Politics, 4:2 (01. 1972), 149–78CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Stuart, W.T., ‘The Explanation of Patron-Client Systems: Some Structural and Ecological Perspectives,” in Strickon, A. and Greenfield, S.. eds.. Structure and Process in Latin America: Patronage, Clientage and Power Systems, Albuquerque, New Mexico University Press, 1972, 1942Google Scholar; Kaufman, R., ‘The Patron-Client Concept and Macropolitics: Prospects and Problems,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 16:3 (07 1974), 284308CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Grazziano, L., A Conceptual Framework for the Study of Clientelism, New York, Cornell University Western Societies Program Occasional Papers, 1974/1975Google Scholar: La Fontaine, J.S.. ‘Unstructured Social Relations,” The West African Journal of Sociology and Political Science, 1:1 (10. 1975), 5181Google Scholar; Gellner, E. and Waterbury, J., eds., Patrons and Clients in Mediterranean Societies, London, Duckworth, 1977Google Scholar, esp. the following papers: Gellner, E., ‘Patrons and clients,” 16Google Scholar; Scott, J., ‘Patronage or exploitation?,” 2140Google Scholar; Weingrod, A., ‘Patronage and power,” 4152Google Scholar; and Waterbury, J., ‘An attempt to put patrons and clients in their place.” 329–42Google Scholar; Davis, J., People of the Mediterranean. An Essay in Comparative Social Anthropology, London, Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1977, ch. 4Google Scholar; Schmidt, S.W., Guasti, L., Lande, C.H. and Scott, J.C., eds., Friends, Followers, and Factions, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1976.Google Scholar

3 The wide occurrence of patron-client relationships encompassed a great variety of links. Multipurpose, diffusely defined clusters of multiple dyadic ties were found between landholders and landless strata in search of share-cropping arrangements in the agrotowns of Italian latifundist Mezzogiorno; in Central Italy Mezzadrian signori and mezzadri paternalistic patronage; in Spain, where the link was either normatively anchored in the moral values of the pueblos and confused with friendship or was oppressive and labeled as caciquismo; in the Middle Eastern smiyya patronage with its stress on the social visibility of the patron and his power in institutional markets, as shown in Egyptian futuwwa as ibn el-balad, Lebanese muqati'ji and Iraqi al-Taba 'iyya. Patrons can use the links in many markets or center their use upon a single institutional sphere as happened with South Italian political single clientelismo of the Notables or with the Spanish caciques. For these patterns see Rossi-Doria, M., ‘The Land Tenure System and Class in Southern Italy,” American Historical Review, 64 (1958), 4653CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Schneider, P., ‘Honor and Conflict in a Sicilian Town,” Anthropological Quarterly, 42:3 (07 1969), 130–54CrossRefGoogle Scholar; idem, Coalition Formation and Colonialism in Western Sicily,” Archives Europeennes de Sociologie, 13 (1972), 255–67CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Tarrow, S.G., Peasant Communism in Southern Italy, New Haven, Yale University Press, 1967Google Scholar; Grazziano, L., ‘Patron-Client Relations in Southern Italy,” European Journal of Political Research, 1:1 (1973), 334CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Allum, P. A., Politics and Society in Postwar Naples, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1973Google Scholar; Silverman, S.F., ‘Patronage and Community-Nation Relationship in Central Italy,” Ethnology, 4:2 (1965), 172–89CrossRefGoogle Scholar; idem, Exploitation in Rural Central Italy: Structure and Ideology in Stratification Study,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 12:3 (07 1970), 327–39CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Pitt-Rivers, J., The People of the SierraGoogle Scholar; Kenny, M., ‘Patterns of Patronage in Spain,” Anthropological Quarterly, 33 (01. 1960), 1423CrossRefGoogle Scholar; idem, A Spanish Tapestry; Aya, R., The Missed Revolution. The Fate of Rural Rebels in Sicily and Southern Spain, 1840–1950, Amsterdam University, Papers on European and Mediterranean Societies, No. 3, 1975Google Scholar; Kern, R., ed., The Caciques. Oligarchical Politics and the System of Caciquismo in the Luso-Hispanic World, Albuquerque, New Mexico University Press, 1973Google Scholar; el-Messiri, S.. ‘The changing role of the futuwwa in the social structure of Cairo,” in Gellner, and Waterbury, , Patrons and Clients, 239–54Google Scholar; Khalaf, S., ‘Changing forms of political patronage in Lebanon,”Google Scholaribid. 185–206; and Rassam, A.. ‘Al-Taba'iyya: Power, patronage and marginal groups in Northern Iraq,”Google Scholaribid. 157–66. More organizationally oriented patterns are found in Southern Italy, where clientelismo and party-directed bossism were strengthened in a continuing political competition, a widening distribution of wealth and the transference of the locus of political articulation to higher levels of political contest. Such pyramidal chain-to-center structure also characterized Spanish caciquismo after the 1874 Restoration. The pattern becomes more impersonal and instrumental and less dependent on ideological prescriptions of solidarity. Unipurpose patterns are found also in Greece and in Latin America, focused either in the political sphere as in Spain or in the instrumental sphere; they are centered on the preferential access of patrons to second-order resources and are built on connections with ruling parties and State bureaucracies or on officeholding. Such links are reported as well for the Middle East (in Morocco for instance) and for Southeast Asian and black African unions and political arenas; in these cases there seem to be greater pressures for congruence between the incumbents” standing in subcollectivities and their position in institutional markets, as well as less ideological strain in the contractation and functioning of the ties. Similar patterns are found in the Japanese yuryokusha political patronage, in a sphere conceived as marginal for the societal and cosmic order and in a frame of weakened primordial territorial and kinship ties. See for instance Aya, R., The Missed RevolutionGoogle Scholar; Costa, J., ‘Ohgarquia y caciquismo como la forma actual de gobierno en Espana,”Google Scholar in idem, Oligarquia v caciquismo. Colectivismo agrario y olros escritos. Madrid. Alianza Editorial, 1967, 1545Google Scholar; Pike, F.B., Hispanismo. 1898–1936, Notre Dame, University of Notre Dame Press. 1971Google Scholar; Romero-Maura, J.. ‘Caciquismo as a political system,” in Gellner, and Waterbury, , Patrons and Clients, 5362Google Scholar; Kern, R., The CaciquesGoogle Scholar; Campbell, J. K.. Honour, Family and Patronage, A Study of Institutions and Moral Values in a Greek Mountain Community, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1964Google Scholar; Legg, K.R., Politics in Modern Greece, Stanford, Stanford University Press, 1969Google Scholar; and idem, Political Change in Clientelistic Polity, The Failure of Democracy in Greece.” Journal of Political and Military Sociology, 1:2 (Fall 1973), 231–46Google Scholar; Waterbury, J.. The Commander of the Faithful: The Moroccan Political Elite, London, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1970Google Scholar; Burke, E.. ‘Morocco and the Near East.” Archives Europeennes de Sociologie, 10 (1969), 7094CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Gellner, E., ‘The Great Patron: A Reinterpretation of Tribal Rebellions,”Google Scholaribid., 61–69; Akarly, E. and Dor, G. Ben, eds., Political Participation in Turkey, Istambul, Bogazici University Publications, 1975Google Scholar; Shor, E., ‘The Thai Bureaucracy,” Administrative Science Quarterly, 5:6 (1960), 6686CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Leeds, A., ‘Brazilian Career and Social Structures: An Evolutionary Model and Case History.” American Anthropologist, 66:6 (1964), 1321–47CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Poitras, G.E., ‘Welfare Bureaucracy and Clientelistic Politics in Mexico,” Administrative Science Quarterly, 18:1 (03 1973). 1826CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Sandbrook, R., ‘Patrons, Clients, and Factions: New Dimensions of Conflict Analysis in Africa,” Canadian Journal of Political Science, 5:1 (03 1972), 104–19CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and idem, Patrons, Clients, and Unions: The Labour Movement and Political Conflict in Kenya,” Journal of Commonwealth Political Studies, 10:1 (03 1972), 327CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Ike, N., Japanese Politics. Patron-Client Democracy, New York, Knopf, 1972 (1957)Google Scholar; and Flanagan, S.C., ‘Voting Behavior in Japan: The Persistence of Traditional Patterns.” Comparative Political Studies, 1:3 (10. 1968), 391412CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also Zuckerman, A., Political Clienteles in Power: Party Factions and Cabinet Coalitions in Italy, Beverly Hills, Sage Publications, 1975Google Scholar. Greater coerciveness and violence is found in Sicilian mafiosi brokerage between urban absentee landlords and the Western Sicilian hinterland; mafiosi competed among themselves and vis-à-vis lower-standing sectors for greater shares of wealth, while attempting to undermine the control of landlords. A similar trend was found in Northeast Brazilian patrimonial relations between the owners of plantations and sugar-refineries and rural workers; in Egyptian futuwwa as baltagi, and in the case of Lebanese qabadat acting on behalf of zu'ama. See Blok, A., The Mafia of a Sicilian Village, 1860–1960. 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An example of the first is found in the Cyrenaican link between Saadi families and Mrabtin as-Sadgan lacking land and water rights; an example of corporated incumbency to the patron role on a civil-based criterion is reported for the Republican State's foreign clientelae to civitas liberae; on a territorial kinship-like base in Japanese dozoku. The corporate character of incumbency was linked to the semi- or quasi-legal statement of the high dissimilarity of the roles, freeing these from their propensity to instability according to changes in the market positions of the incumbents. Similar are some ritualized patterns, often described as clientelistic: the Japanese oyabun-kobun and the Christian compadrazgo. The link found among the Interlacustrine Bantu of East Africa resembles this aspect; here the ceremonial formalization makes the link no longer vulnerable to the transactional actual interests of the partners. On this range of patterns see among others Peters, E.L., ‘The Tied and the Free (Lybia),” in Peristiany, J., ed., Contributions to Mediterranean Sociology, Paris-The Hague, Mouton, 1968, 167–88Google Scholar; Badian, E., Foreign Clientelae (246–70 B.C.), Oxford, Clarendon Press. 1958Google Scholar; Beardsley, R.K. et al. , Village Japan, Chicago, The University of Chicago Press, 1959Google Scholar; Ishino, I., ‘The Oyabun-Kobun,” Nakane, C., Japanese Society, London, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1970Google Scholar; Foster, G.M.. ‘Cofradia and Compadrazgo'Google Scholar; Mair, L.P., ‘Clientship in East Africa,” Cahiers d'Etudes Africaines, 2:6 (1961), 315–26CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Steinhart, F., ‘Vassal and Fief in three Lacustrine Kingdoms,”Google Scholaribid., 7:28 (1967), 606–23. Patron-client ties and similar relations were reported in traditional China, India, Ireland, Hungary, the East Arctic, Nepal, Malta, and the Balkans. See for instance Folsom, K.E., Friends, Guests and Colleagues: The Mu-fu System in the late Ch'ing Period, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1968Google Scholar; Breman, J., Patronage and Exploitation: Changing Agrarian Relations in South Gujarat, India, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1974Google Scholar; Bax, M., ‘Patronage Irish Style: Irish Politicians as Brokers,” Sociologische Gids, 17 (0506 1970), 179–91Google Scholar; Fél, E. and Hofer, T., Proper Peasants: Traditional Life in a Hungarian Village, Viking Fund Publications in Anthropology, No. 46, Chicago, Aldine, 1969Google Scholar; Paine, R., ed., Patrons and Brokers in the East Arctic, Memorial University of Newfoundland, Institute of Social and Economic Research, 1971, Newfoundland Social and Economic Papers No. 2Google Scholar; Caplan, L., ‘Cash and Kind: Two media of “Bribery” in Nepal,” Man N.S., 6 (1971), 266–78CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Boissevain, J., Saints and Fireworks: Religion and Politics in Rural Malta, London, Athlone Press, 1965Google Scholar; and Hammel, E.A., Alternative Social Structures and Ritual Relations in the Balkans, Englewood Cliffs, Prentice Hall, 1968. 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4 See for instance Ike, N., Japanese Politics: Patron-Client DemocracyGoogle Scholar; Galjart, B., ‘Old Patrons and New: Some Notes on the Consequences of Patronage for Local Development Projects,” Sociologia Ruralis, 1 (1967), 335–46CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Weingrod, A. and Morin, E., ‘Post Peasants: The Character of Contemporary Sardinian Society,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 13:3 (07 1971), 301–24CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Blok, A., ‘Peasants, Patrons and Brokers in Western Sicily,’ Anthropological Quarterly, 42:3 (07 1969), 155–70CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Allum, P.A., Politics and Society in Postwar NaplesGoogle Scholar; Bax, M., “Patronage Irish Style’Google Scholar; Khalaf, S., ‘Changing forms of political patronage in Lebanon.”Google Scholar For a broad treatment of the adaptability of patron-client relations, see Powell, J.D., ‘Peasant Society and Clientelistic Politics,” American Political Science Review, 64:2 (06 1970), 411–25CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Scott, J.C., ‘Corruption, Machine Politics, and Political Change,”Google Scholaribid., 63:4 (Dec. 1969), 1142–58; Lemarchand, R. and Legg, K., ‘Political Clientelism and Development: A Preliminary Analysis,” Comparative Politics, 4:2 (01. 1972), 149–78CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Scott, J.C., ‘Patron-Client Politics and Political Change in Southeast Asia,” American Political Science Review, 66:1 (03 1972), 91113CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Landé, C.H., ‘Networks and Groups in Southeast Asia: Some Observations on the Group Theory of Politics,”Google Scholaribid., 67:1 (March 1973), 103–27; Schneider, P., Schneider, J. and Hansen, E., ‘Modernization and Development: The Role of Regional Elites and Noncorporated Groups in the European Mediterranean,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 14:3 (07 1972), 328–50CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Legg, K.R., Patrons, Clients and Politicians. New Perspectives on Political Clientelism, Beverly Hills, Institute of International Studies. Working Papers on Development, No. 3, n.d.Google Scholar

5 These controversies are analyzed in Eisenstadt, S.N. and Curelaru, M., The Form of Sociology, Paradigms and Crises, New York, Wiley and Sons, 1976, esp. chs. 8 and 9Google Scholar; and in idem, Macrosociology. Theory, Analysis and Comparative Studies,” Current Sociology, 25:2 (1977), esp. chs. II and III.Google Scholar

6 For the approach of ‘classical” functionalist anthropology on this point see Radcliffe-Brown, A.R., ‘On the Concept of Function in Social Science” and ‘On Social Structure,”Google Scholar in idem, ed., Structure and Function in Primitive Society, London, Cohen and West, 1952, 178204Google Scholar; and Gluckman, M., Custom and Conflict in Africa, Oxford, B. Blackwell, 1955Google Scholar. On the structural functional approach see for instance Parsons, T. and Shils, E., eds., Toward a General Theory of Action, Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1951CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Parsons, T., The Social System, New York, The Free Press, 1964Google Scholar; and Parsons, T. and Smelser, N.J., Economy and Society, New York, The Free Press, 1965Google Scholar. For the emphasis put on interpersonal relations and exchange by scholars who dealt with patron-client relations see Wolf, E., ‘Kinship, Friendship, and Patron-Client Relationships’Google Scholar; Boissevain, J., Friends of Friends, Networks, Manipulators, and Coalitions, Oxford, B. Blackwell, 1974Google Scholar; Mayer, A. C., ‘The Significance of Ouasi-Groups in the Study of Complex Societies,” in Banton, M., ed., The Social Anth apology of Complex Societies, 122Google Scholar; Swartz, M.J., Local-Level Politics: Social and Cultural Perspectives, Chicago, Aldine, 1966, esp. 5368, 199204, 227–41, 243–69Google Scholar; Boissevain, J., ‘The Place of Non-Groups in Social Sciences,” Man, N.S., 3:4 (1968), 542–56CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Pitt-Rivers, J., ‘The Kith and the Kin,” in Goody, J., Character of Kinship, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1973, 89105Google Scholar; Boissevain, J. and Mitchell, J.C., eds., Network Analysis. Studies in Social Interaction, Paris-The Hague, Mouton, 1973Google Scholar; Landé, C.H., ‘Networks and Groups in Southeast Asia: Some Observations on the Group Theory of Polities’Google Scholar; idem, Group Politics and Dyadic Politics: Notes for a Theory,” in Schmidt, et al. Friends, Followers, and Factions, 506–10Google Scholar; Weingrod, A.. ‘Patronage and power,” in Gellner, and Waterbury, , Patrons and Clients, 4152Google Scholar; and Scott, J.C., ‘Political Clientelism: A Bibliographical Essay,” in Schmidt, et al. , Friends, Followers and Factions, 488–89.Google Scholar

7 On the concept of honor in societies in which patron-client relations can also be found, see Peristiany, J.G., ed., Honour and Shame: The Values of Mediterranean Society, London, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1965Google Scholar; Schneider, P., ‘Honour and Conflict in a Sicilian Town’Google Scholar; Campbell, J.K., Honour, Family, and PatronageGoogle Scholar: Pitt-Rivers, J., ‘Honour and Social Status,”Google Scholar in Peristiany, J.G., ed., Honour and Shame, 1978Google Scholar; idem. ‘Honor,” in Shills, D.L., ed., International Encyclopaedia of the Social Sciences, New York; Macmillan and Free Press, 1968, Vol. 6, 503–10Google Scholar; Davis, J., ‘Honour and Politics in Picticci,” Proceedings of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 1969, 6481Google Scholar; Schneider, J., ‘Of Vigilance and Virgins. Honour, Shame and the Access to Resources in Mediterranean Societies,” Ethnology, 10:1 (01. 1971), 124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar On the Image of Limited Good see Foster, G., ‘Peasant Society and the Image of Limited Good.” American Anthropologist, 67:2 (04 1965), 293315CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For controversies about the concept see for instance: Kaplan, D. and Saler, B., ‘Foster's Image of the Limited Good: An Example of Anthropological Explanation,” American Anthropologist, 68:1 (01. 1966), 202–05CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Bennett, J.W., ‘Further Remarks on Foster's Image of Limited Good,”Google Scholaribid., 206–09; and Foster's reply, ibid., 210–14. See also Piker, S., ‘The Image of Limited Good: Comments on an Exercise in Description and Interpretation,” American Anthropologist, 68:5 (10. 1966), 1202–11CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Foster, G.M., ‘A Second Look at Limited Good,” Anthropological Quarterly, 45:2 (04 1972), 5764CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Gregory, J.R., ‘Image of Limited Good or Expectation of Reciprocity?,” Current Anthropology, 16:1 (03 1975), 7392CrossRefGoogle Scholar. On ‘amoral familism” see Banfield, E., The Moral Basis of a Backward Society, Glencoe, IL, The Free Press, 1958Google Scholar: Wichers, A.J., ‘Amoral Familism Reconsidered,” Sociologia Ruralis, 4:2 (1964), 167–81CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Pizzorno, A., ‘Amoral Familism and Historical Marginality,” International Review of Community Development, 15:16 (1966), 5566.Google Scholar

8 Landé, C.H., ‘Introduction. The Dyadic Basis of Clientelism,” in Schmidt, et al. , Friends, Followers, and Factions, XIII–XXXVII.Google Scholar

9 See for instance Zuckerman, A., Political ClientelesGoogle Scholar, Tarrow, S., From Center to Periphery. Alternative Models of National-Local Policy Impact and an Application to France and Italy, Ithaca, Cornell University Western Societies Program Occasional Papers, No. 4 (1976)Google Scholar; Legg, K.R., Patrons, Clients and Politicians, New Perspectives on Political ClientelismGoogle Scholar; Waterbury, J., The Commander of the Faithful. The Moroccan Political Elite. A Study in Segmented Politics, London, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1970Google Scholar; Grazziano, L., A Conceptual Framework for the Study of ClientelismGoogle Scholar; and the contributions to the Conference on Patronage held Nov. 1974 in Rome by the Center for Mediterranean Studies of the American Universities Field Staff and included in Gellner, E. and Waterbury, J., Patrons and Clients, esp.Google ScholarGellner, E., ‘Patrons and Clients,” 16.Google Scholar

10 See for instance the bibliographical essay of Scott, J.C., in Schmidt, et al. , Friends, Followers, and Factions, 483505, and the literature quoted in preceding notes.Google Scholar

11 Homans, G.C., Social Behaviour. Its Elementary Forms, New York, Harcourt Brace and World, 1961Google Scholar; Blau, P., ‘Justice in Social Exchange,” Sociological Inquiry, 34:1–2 (Spring 1964), 193206CrossRefGoogle Scholar; idem, Exchange and Power in Social Life, New York, Wiley and Sons, 1964Google Scholar. A treatment of these different orientations in social exchange theory can be found in Ekeh, P., Social Exchange Theory, The Two Traditions, Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1964Google Scholar. See also Turner, J.H., The Structure of Sociological Theory, Homewood, IL, The Dorsey Press, 1974, 211320.Google Scholar

12 Mauss, M., The Gift, Forms and Functions of Exchange in Archaic Societies, London, Cohen and West, 1954Google Scholar [Essai sur le don,” Année sociologique, n.s., 1 (1925), 30126Google Scholar]; Levi-Strauss, C., The Elementary Structures of Kinship, Boston, Beacon Press, 1969 (1949)Google Scholar; Parsons, T., ‘On the Concept of Influence,” Public Opinion Quarterly, 27 (Spring 1963), 3762CrossRefGoogle Scholar; idem, ‘Rejoinder to Bauer and Coleman,” ibid., 83–92; idem, On the Concept of Political Power,” Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 103:3 (1963), 232–62Google Scholar; Coleman, J.S., ‘Political Money,” The American Political Science Review, 64:4 (12. 1970), 1074–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

13 The difference between specific and generalized exchange as presented here is not identical to the difference between restricted and generalized exchange as presented above all by C. Levi-Strauss. The latter distinction refers mostly to the scope and ‘directedness” of the exchange of the restricted one as against the indirection of the latter. Specific exchange can be both direct (barter) and indirect, and the more indirect it is the more dependent it is on generalized media of exchange: money, political loyalties or influence. The proper functioning of such media does in a way exacerbate the problem of trust and the importance of appropriate mechanisms of generalized exchange. Generalized exchange is almost always less direct, but the scope of the persons or spheres it involves may vary greatly.

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25 On these aspects of patron-client relations and especially on their fragility, see among others Blok, A., The Mafia of a Sicilian VillageGoogle Scholar; Wolf, E., ‘On Peasant Rebellions,” International Social Science Journal, 21:2 (1969), 286–93Google Scholar; Gellner, E., ‘How to live in anarchy,” The Listener, 3:4 (1958), 579–83Google Scholar; idem, ‘Patrons and Clients,” Cardoso, F.H., ‘Tensoes sociais no campo e reforma agraria,” Revista brasileira de estudos poiiticos, 12 (10. 1961), 726Google Scholar; Friedrich, P., Agrarian Revolt in a Mexican Village, Englewood Cliffs, Prentice-Hall, 1970Google Scholar; Hottinger, A., ‘Zuama in Historical Perspective,” in Binder, L., ed., Politics in Lebanon, New York, Wiley and Sons, 1966, 85105Google Scholar; Pool, D.The Politics of Patronage: Elites and Social Structure in IraqGoogle Scholar; and el-Messiri, S., ‘The changing role of the futuwwa.’Google Scholar

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45 The case of the mafiosi is only an outstanding example of the continuous struggle and imbalance in relations and terms of exchange found in these societies. Examples for Morocco, Latin America, Southeast Asia and Africa proliferate in the literature; for references see Notes 4,33,36,41.

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47 This aspect of social ‘insurance” was already emphasized in the work of scholars of Southeast Asia at the end of the sixties and beginning of the seventies (see Scott, J.C., ‘Patron-Client Politics,” as well as the work of R. Lemarchand and K. Legg).Google Scholar

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50 On machine politics in the U.S. see Wolfinger, R. and Field, J., ‘Political Ethos and the Structure of City Government,” American Political Science Review, 60:2 (1966), 306–26;CrossRefGoogle ScholarBanfield, E., ed., Urban Government, New York, The Free Press, 1969, esp. ch. 3 and 5, 165265 and 365425;Google Scholar and Wolfinger, R., ‘Why Political Machines.’Google Scholar On Western Europe see Bax, M., Harpstrings and confessions: A n anthropological study of politics in Rural Ireland, Amsterdam, University of Amsterdam, 1973;Google ScholarRichards, P.G., Patronage in British Government, London, Allen and Unwin, 1963;Google ScholarZeldin, T., The Political System of Napoleon III, London, Macmillan, 1958.Google Scholar For the Soviet Union see Frank, P., ‘How to get on in the Soviet Union,” New Society, 5 06 1969, 867–68;Google Scholar and Ionescu, G., ‘Patronage under communism,”Google Scholar in Gellner, E. and Waterbury, J., Patrons and Clients, 97102.Google Scholar On China see Folsom, K. E., Friends, Guests, and Colleagues: The Mu-fu System in Late Ch';ing Period, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1968;Google Scholar and Fried, M., Fabric of Chinese Society, New York, Praeger, 1973.Google Scholar For the Canadian Arctic see Paine, R., ed., Patrons and Brokers in the East Arctic.Google Scholar For the jajmani system see for instance Breman, J., Patronage and Exploitation, Changing Agrarian Relations in South Gujarat, India, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1974.Google Scholar

51 See for instance Heidenheimer, A., ed., Political Corruption: Readings in Comparative Analysis, New York, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1970.Google Scholar

52 For these trends in pluralistic societies see Dahl, R. A., Polyarchy, Participation and Opposition, New Haven and London, Yale University Press, 1971;Google Scholar and idem, ‘Patterns of Opposition,” in idem, ed., Political Opposition in Western Democracies, New Haven and London, Yale University Press, 1966,332–47Google Scholar, and ‘Epilogue,” in ibid., 387–401. For the Soviet Union see Fainsod, M., Smolensk under Soviet rule, Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1958Google Scholar. For the caste systems see Bailey, F. G., Caste and the Economic Frontier, Manchester University Press, 1957;Google ScholarIsaacs, H. R., India's Ex-Untouchables, Bombay, Asia publishing House, 1965;Google ScholarBéteille, A., ‘The Future of the Backward Classes,”Google Scholar in idem, Castes: Old and New, London, Asia Publishing House, 1969,103–45;Google ScholarPubMed and David, K., ‘Hierarchy and Equivalence in Jaffna.'Google Scholar

53 On the patterns of revolt see Miller, N. and Aya, R., eds., National Liberation: Revolution in the Third World, New York, Free Press, 1971;Google ScholarCough, K. and Sharma, H. P., eds., Imperialism and Revolution in South Asia, New York, Monthly Review Press, 1973;Google ScholarSolomon, R. L., ‘Saya San and the Burmese Rebellion,” Modern Asian Studies, 3:3 (1969), 209–33CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Gobron, G., History and Philosophy ofCaodaism, Paris, Dervy, 1949;Google ScholarGoulet, G., Les soci`;tes secretes en terre d'Annam, Saigon, C. Ardin, 1926;Google ScholarGuerrero, M. C., ‘The Colorum Uprisings 1924–1931,’ Asian Studies, 5:1 (1967), 6578;Google ScholarKartodiridjo, S., The Peasants’ Revolt ofBanten in 1888, Its Conditions, Course, and Sequel: A Case Study of Social Movements in Indonesia, The Hague, M. Nijhoff, 1966;Google ScholarBenda, H. J. and Castles, L., ‘The Samin Movement,’ Bijdragen Tot de Taal-, Land-, en Volkenkunde, 125:3 (1969), 207–40;CrossRefGoogle ScholarBenda, H. J. and McVey, R., eds., The Communist Uprisings of 1926–1927 in Indonesia: Key Documents, Ithaca, Cornell Univer- sity Press, 1960;Google ScholarMigdal, J., Peasants, Politics and Revolution, Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1974;Google Scholar and Ross, S. R., ed., Is the Mexican Revolution Dead?, New York, Knopf, 1966Google Scholar. See also below.

54 Hobsbawm, E.Primitive Rebels, Studies in Archaic Forms of Social Movements in the 19th and 20th Centuries, Manchester, Manchester University Press, 1971 (1959);Google Scholaridem, Bandits, London, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1969;Google ScholarPubMed Cf. Blok, A., ‘On Brigandage, with Special Refer- ence to Peasant Mobilization,” Sociologische Gids, 18:2 (1971), 208–16.Google Scholar

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56 Scott, J. C., ‘The Erosion of Patron-Client Bonds and Social Change in Rural Southeast Asia,” Journal of Asian Studies, 32:1 (10 1972), 537.CrossRefGoogle Scholar