Social Contracts for Development

Page 37

Chapter

2

Tracing Social Contract Theory

Social Contract Theory and Development in Africa1 The origins of social contract theory can be traced as far back as antiquity. Plato’s Republic describes a social arrangement for what the philosopher saw as a perfect society. The field has also been a staple of Euro-American political theory since the seventeenth century, with philosophers such as Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau discussing the role and purpose of the state and of the ruler. The social contract has been understood in different ways throughout history. The classical theorists, such as Hobbes, Locke, and Rousseau, were interested in the question of the origin and legitimacy of states and rulers. For them, the social contract is an agreement whereby individuals consent to lay down their rights and subject themselves to the coercive power of the state, subject to everyone making a similar commitment. For modern social contract theorists, such as Rawls, the existence of the state is often taken as a given and the focus is on identifying the social institutions and policies that reflect justice as a foundational virtue of a society or that try to optimize some function of the state. These social contract theories can also be seen through the lens of the conditions under which negotiation over the social contract takes place. Contractarians argue that agents are driven by the rational pursuit of personal interest, whereas contractualists see agents as concerned with reaching a reasonable agreement on universal principles of justice that are capable of governing society. The first explicit engagements with social contracts in development theory emerged in the 1990s and early 2000s from different directions in different regions. In the Middle East, the collapse of oil prices and the structural adjustment programs of the 1980s brought to the fore the need to rethink social contracts based on handouts to maintain social peace. In Latin America 13


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Articles inside

How Can the World Bank and Other Partners Engage with Social Contracts?

3min
pages 120-121

Analysis to Understand Chronic Policy Failure and Identify Opportunities for Reform

3min
pages 118-119

A Diagnostic: Understanding Social Contract Dynamics, Opportunities, and Obstacles to Reform

3min
pages 116-117

References

11min
pages 109-115

Notes

1min
page 108

Social Accountability and the Social Contract

6min
pages 103-105

Response to COVID-19

4min
pages 106-107

Normative Aspects of Social Contracts: The Case of Human Rights

2min
page 100

Inequality, the Social Contract, and Electoral Support

4min
pages 101-102

African Protests and Reshaping the Social Contract

11min
pages 95-99

The Taxation Challenge in Africa: Cause and Effect of Prevailing Social Contracts

4min
pages 86-87

The Role of Social Contract Fragmentation in Conflict and Fragility

7min
pages 92-94

South Africa: A Dynamic Social Contract

4min
pages 78-79

Somalia: The Role of Nonstate Actors in Shaping the Social Contract

2min
page 77

Senegal: Collaboration across Actors for a Stable Social Contract

2min
page 76

The Conceptual Framework in Context

5min
pages 69-71

Cameroon: Lack of Responsiveness in the Social Contract

4min
pages 72-73

References

2min
pages 67-68

Annex 3B Country Codes

1min
page 65

Annex 3A Empirical Methodology and Summary Statistics

6min
pages 61-64

Notes

2min
page 66

References

1min
pages 29-30

Introduction

3min
pages 25-26

Social Contract Theory and Development in Africa

13min
pages 37-42

Social Contract Definition and Conceptual Framework

16min
pages 47-54

Introduction

6min
pages 31-33
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