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7 - Political regimes and microcosms

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 March 2010

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Summary

Pyramidal versus hierarchical regimes

The continuum between pyramidal and hierarchical political regimes deals with both the decision-making and decision-implementing aspects of a political system. The practical reason for treating these aspects jointly is that archaeological evidence in the Rosario Valley does not allow anything like a distinction between policymaking (politics) and policy-implementation (administration or bureaucracy) to be made. There are no executive buildings and artifacts as opposed to administrative buildings and artifacts. Taking the argument onto a more interpretive plane, Maya ethnohistoric sources suggest that in the Postclassic Period there were no clearly separable groups of people involved in policy-making as opposed to policyimplementation (with the exception of menial administrative “flunkies ” such as the tupiles mentioned in a few Yucatec sources). More precisely, this assertion is based on an ethnohistorical survey covering a variety of Contact Period Maya polities (the Yucatec Maya-de Montmollin 1980; the Guatemala Highland Quiche Mayade Montmollin 1982b; and the Chiapas Highland Maya-de Montmollin 1979c). Once again applying historical-evolutionary logic, one would not expect earlier periods to feature fully professional bureaucratic structures (after Weber, see Gerth and Mills eds. 1946: ch. 8). This logic is a form of substantivism applied to politics instead of economics. It resembles Giddens' discontinuist perspective on the development of the state, one which draws a sharp contrast in terms of bureaucratic structure and efficacy between traditional states and modern nation-states (Giddens 1985). Thus, the lack of evidence for pure administrators or bureaucrats in the Rosario Valley polity may be taken to reflect a genuine absence of such specialized personnel.

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The Archaeology of Political Structure
Settlement Analysis in a Classic Maya Polity
, pp. 140 - 172
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1989

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