Moisey Ostrogorsky

Moisey Ostrogorsky
Born 1854
Grodno Governorate
Died February 10, 1921(1921-02-10)
Petrograd

Moisey Yakovlevich Ostrogorski (also Ostrogorsky; Russian: Моисе́й Я́ковлевич Острого́рский; Belarusian: Майсе́й Я́каўлевiч Aстрaго́рскi; Grodno Governorate, Russian Empire, now in Belarus, 1854 – Petrograd, USSR, February 10, 1921) was a Russian politician, political scientist, historian, jurist and sociologist. Along with Max Weber and Robert Michels, he is considered one of the founders of political sociology, especially in the field of theories about Party Systems and political parties.[1] Ostrogorski noted that loyalty to parties is often comparable to loyalty to one's religion. He was a member of the First State Duma of the Russian Empire representing the Hrodna province in 1906-1907.

Biography

Moisey Ostrogorski, or Moisei Ostrogorsky, was born and grew up in Grodno province (now in the Belarus), studied law at Saint Petersburg State University and worked for the Russian justice ministry.

Ostrogorski represented Grodno province in the First State Duma (Parliament of the Russian Empire).

In the 1880s, he went to Paris and studied at the École Libre des Sciences Politiques, where he wrote his dissertation Les origines du suffrage universel (The origins of universal suffrage) (1885). Whilst in France, Ostrogorski imbibed French political thought, which was distrustful of an all-powerful state, from thinkers such as Comte, Durkheim, Tocqueville, Saint Simon and Proudhon.[2]

He traveled to the United States and Great Britain. In 1902, he published Democracy and the Organization of Political Parties[3] (originally in French), which compared the political system of the two nations. After returning to Russia in 1906, he became the Duma representative for the Hrodna province. He left politics after the Duma was dissolved during the Russian Revolution.

As a political thinker, he was recognized in the West before he was in Russia. Ostrogorski has been influential on the political thought of the 20th century.

After leaving politics, he taught at the Psychoneurological Institute in St. Petersburg.

Work on political science

Ostrogorski's main work is La democratie et l'organisation des partis politiques.[4] He noted behavioural determinism in organisational structure: "As soon as a party, even if created for the noblest object perpetuates itself, it tends to degeneration", which influenced "the later researches of Max Weber, Robert Michels, and Andre Siegfried".[5]

Ostrogorski is also the author of a book that is about the equality of the sexes: La Femme au point de vue du droit public.[6]

Works

As a lawyer:

As a historian:

As a political scientist:

Articles:

Further reading

References

  1. Lipset (1982)
  2. (Lipset, S.M. (1960). Political Man. Garden City, New York. p22)
  3. "The Party System: Ostrogorski's Work on Democracy and Political Organization," The New York Times, December 27, 1902.
  4. (Paris, 1903; the English edition, London, 1903; vol, 2 appeared as Democracy and the Party System in the United States, New York, 1910; the new advanced edition of all works under the title La democratie et les partis politiques, "Democracy and Political Parties", Paris, 1912)
  5. (Scheider, Theodor. (1962). The State and Society in Modern Times. London, England: Thomas Nelson and Sons, p84.) Ostrogorski is one of the few scholars referenced by Max Weber in his classic lecture "Politics as Vocation."
  6. (Paris, 1892, 2 English edition, London, 1908; German translation, Leipzig, 1897, the Polish translation, Warsaw, 1898)
Wikisource has original works written by or about:
Moisey Yakovlevich Ostrogorski
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.