A Formula to Save Us (From Ourselves): Continuity and Change in the Spanish Legal Domination System (1959–2024)
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Wiley Online Library
Fecha
2024-04-24Referencia bibliográfica
Villena Oliver, A. & Romero Reche, A. Sociol Lens. 2024;37:240–255. [https://doi.org/10.1111/johs.12459]
Resumen
This paper analyzes how a structure of Weberian rational domination has been built and consolidated
in Spain since 1959, the year when the so‐called Economic Stabilization Plan was approved.
This sort of economic constitution represents one of the most important foundations of a technocratic
regime that survived the death of a dictator (General Francisco Franco), not only transcending
the traditional differentiations between autocratic and democratic regimes but also
offering a different perspective to the debate about the degree of continuity and rupture attained
by the Spanish political transition in the 1970s. We analyze the institutions, leadership, most
influential networks, political discourse, and historical myths through a theory of power and elites
to examine the Spanish case. With this remarkable example of structural transformation and
institutional resilience over decades, we also propose a more complex and multidimensional
approach that could be fruitful to understanding some of the problems of political representation
that current democracies are undergoing.





