释义 |
corporatism
cor·po·ra·tist C0656550 (kôr′pər-ə-tĭst′, kôr′prə-tĭst′)adj. Of, relating to, or being a corporative state or system. cor′po·ra·tism n.corporatism (ˈkɔːpərɪtɪzəm; -prɪtɪzəm) or corporativismn (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) the organization of a state on a corporative basis ˈcorporatist n, adjcor•po•rat•ism (ˈkɔr pə rəˌtɪz əm, -prəˌtɪz-) also cor•po•rat•iv•ism (-pəˌreɪ təˌvɪz əm, -pər ə tə-, -prə-) n. the principles, doctrine, or system of corporative organization of a political unit, as a city or state. [1885–90] cor′po•rat•ist, adj. ThesaurusNoun | 1. | corporatism - control of a state or organization by large interest groups; "individualism is in danger of being swamped by a kind of corporatism"control - power to direct or determine; "under control" | Translationscorporatism
corporatism - as in Spain under Franco and more generally in association with FASCISM, the state control of major ‘corporations’ (e.g. labour organizations), with the aim of removing or suppressing social conflict, fostering nationalism, etc.
- relations between government and key interest groups (see PRESSURE GROUPS), especially big business and TRADE UNIONS, involving:
- intermediation – bodies standing between the state and the individual citizen negotiate agreements with the government on behalf of their members (e.g. agreements on wages and prices);
- incorporation – the possession of a special status by these organizations (e.g. in the UK the CBI or the TUC), so that, in some respects, they become virtual extensions of government, what Middlemas, Politics in an Industrial Society, (1979) calls ‘governing institutions’. The UK is often regarded as having moved in a corporatist direction in this second sense in the period 1960 to 1979, a tendency which was reversed with the election of the Thatcher government in 1979. Modern Austria is some times advanced as a more fully developed example of corporatism in sense 2 , characterized by features lacking in the UK, including wide social agreement on the value of social partnership, compulsory membership of trade unions and employers organizations, and effective cooperation between capital and labour.
In a more general sense, ‘intermediate organizations’, and thus ‘corporatist’ social structures, were advanced as a solution to modern social ills by DURKHEIM. Corporatism is often regarded as one of the ways in which governments intervene to manage ADVANCED CAPITALISM. However, in the UK and elsewhere corporatism has been undermined by crises of accumulation and a reversal of consensus politics. See FISCAL CRISIS IN THE CAPITALIST STATE, HABERMAS; see also SECTORAL CLEAVAGES. corporatism
Words related to corporatismnoun control of a state or organization by large interest groupsRelated Words |