The Levellers’ Conception of Legitimate Authority

This article examines the Levellers’ doctrine of legitimate authority, by showing how it emerged as a critique of theories of absolute sovereignty. For the Levellers, any arbitrary power is tyrannical, insofar as it reduces human beings to an unnatural condition. Legitimate authority is necessarily...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Eunice Ostrensky
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Sevilla 2018-01-01
Series:Araucaria
Subjects:
law
Online Access:http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=28264625008
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spelling doaj-fc55f88e757c4186905bf7437129cff32021-10-08T15:46:46ZengUniversidad de SevillaAraucaria1575-68232340-21992018-01-012039157186The Levellers’ Conception of Legitimate AuthorityEunice OstrenskyThis article examines the Levellers’ doctrine of legitimate authority, by showing how it emerged as a critique of theories of absolute sovereignty. For the Levellers, any arbitrary power is tyrannical, insofar as it reduces human beings to an unnatural condition. Legitimate authority is necessarily founded on the people, who creates the constitutional order and remains the locus of political power. The Levellers also contend that parliamentary representation is not the only mechanism by which the people may acquire a political being; rather the people outside Parliament are the collective agent able to transform and control institutions and policies. In this sense, the Levellers hold that a highly participative community should exert sovereignty, and that decentralized government is a means to achieve that goal.http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=28264625008limited sovereigntyconstitutionpeoplelawrights
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eunice Ostrensky
spellingShingle Eunice Ostrensky
The Levellers’ Conception of Legitimate Authority
Araucaria
limited sovereignty
constitution
people
law
rights
author_facet Eunice Ostrensky
author_sort Eunice Ostrensky
title The Levellers’ Conception of Legitimate Authority
title_short The Levellers’ Conception of Legitimate Authority
title_full The Levellers’ Conception of Legitimate Authority
title_fullStr The Levellers’ Conception of Legitimate Authority
title_full_unstemmed The Levellers’ Conception of Legitimate Authority
title_sort levellers’ conception of legitimate authority
publisher Universidad de Sevilla
series Araucaria
issn 1575-6823
2340-2199
publishDate 2018-01-01
description This article examines the Levellers’ doctrine of legitimate authority, by showing how it emerged as a critique of theories of absolute sovereignty. For the Levellers, any arbitrary power is tyrannical, insofar as it reduces human beings to an unnatural condition. Legitimate authority is necessarily founded on the people, who creates the constitutional order and remains the locus of political power. The Levellers also contend that parliamentary representation is not the only mechanism by which the people may acquire a political being; rather the people outside Parliament are the collective agent able to transform and control institutions and policies. In this sense, the Levellers hold that a highly participative community should exert sovereignty, and that decentralized government is a means to achieve that goal.
topic limited sovereignty
constitution
people
law
rights
url http://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=28264625008
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