Normative Political Theory
Normative Political Theory
Normative Political Theory
173–185
doi: 10.4467/00000000TP.17.009.6588
www.ejournals.eu/teoria_polityki
Dorota Pietrzyk-Reeves
Jagiellonian University
Abstract: Normative political theory was developed in ancient Greece and provided the
foundations for political research. Its role was never questioned until the rise of logical
positivism and empirical social science with its claims to be truly scientific’ that is, value
neutral. The article starts with a short overview of this controversy and provides an ana-
lysis of the nature of normative theorizing, the structure of a normative argument and
the role of normative political theory. The last section focuses on the problematic rela-
tionship between empirical and normative research. It is argued that political philosop-
hy can be practical, but before it becomes oriented towards practical goals, it should deal
with purely deductive fact-insensitive principles.
Keywords: normative theory, normativity, political philosophy, political science, logical po-
sitivism
Political science combines the insights and approaches of both the humanities
and the social sciences. Although today its methods might be predominantly
empirical, the very foundations of political science have a normative character
and pertain to the key question in political philosophy: what is a good politi-
cal order? The philosophical insights into the nature of politics laid the foun-
dations for political theories that have developed since the ancient Greek tradi-
tion. Several decades ago, however, the role of these philosophical insights, and
more broadly, the role of a normative theory of politics, became questionable or
questioned by numerous political scientists who preferred a neutral empirical
approach to the study of politics. It was evident that normative political theo-
ry needed some sort of justification and explanation as to what its role and pur-
174 Dorota Pietrzyk-Reeves
Introduction
There are two different intellectual paradigms in political science: a normati-
ve approach and a ‘positive’ approach. The ‘positive’ paradigm treats the scien-
tific study of politics as associated with a value neutral approach to the subject
(Gerring, Yesnowitz, 2006, p. 101) and argues that theory can be applied only to
what is, not to what ought to be. Neopositivists such as Lucien Levy Bruhl clai-
med that science cannot be a science in so far as it is normative. At the advent of
the behavioural turn in political science Robert Dahl stated:
The empirical political scientist is concerned with what is […] not with what ought
to be […]. The behaviorally minded student of politics is prepared to describe va-
lues as empirical data; but, qua ‘scientist’ he seeks to avoid prescription or inquiry
into the grounds on which judgments of value can properly be made (Dahl, 1961,
pp. 770–771).
chael Oakeshott, Leo Strauss or Hannah Arendt), but have also expressed dis-
satisfaction with ‘the empiricist separation of normative (advocacy-oriented)
and empirical (explanation-oriented) approaches’ (Shapiro, 1981, p. 5). Af-
ter the publication of John Rawls’ Theory of Justice, political philosophy and
more broadly normative political theory has gone from strength to strength
to become recognized again as a valuable or even necessary method of re-
search in political science. This recognition came with the agreement that valu-
es can be seen as the substance of political systems and political structures for
they play the role of mediators in both prescriptive and descriptive accounts
of politics.
In 1976 Charles Taylor published a celebrated article ‘Neutrality in Politi-
cal Science’ in which he argued, against the prevailing intellectual current at the
time, that the findings of political science are not and will never be value-free:
‘a given explanatory framework secretes a notion of good, and a set of valuations,
which cannot be done away with – though they can be overridden – unless we do
away with the framework’. Using several examples, including Seymour Lipset’s
analysis of democracy in his Political Man, he explains that empirical theories
or supposedly pure assumptions about facts have normative consequences ex-
pressed in statements about what is good or desirable in politics.1 It thus proves
that a ‘connection between factual base and valuation is built in, as it were, to the
conceptual structure’ (Taylor, 1994, p. 559). When establishing a framework of
political analysis, the range of values that can be adopted must necessarily be li-
mited, and thus value orientation cannot be done away with completely. Conse-
quently, ‘to the extent that political science cannot dispense with theory, with the
search for a framework, to that extent it cannot stop developing normative theo-
ry’ (Taylor, 1994, p. 569).
This position undermines the philosophical claim of neutrality in politi-
cal science, stating that the separation of facts and values is possible. Although
Taylor’s position could not solve the controversy once and forever, it paved the
way for critical reassessment of arguments against normative theorizing in po-
litics. Values are central phenomena in political science and international rela-
tions while facts and values are inseparable characteristics of the world as it is
comprehended by humans. The argument that real political problems can only
be understood in terms of objective material interests and empirically observab-
le facts needs to be dismissed as providing an inadequate account of political
1
Taylor brings this illuminating quotation from Lipset: ‘A basic premise of this book is that de-
mocracy is not only or even primarily a means through which different groups can attain their
ends or seek the good society; it is the good society itself in operation. Only the give-and-take
of a free society’s internal struggles offers some guarantee that the products of the society will
not accumu1ulate in the hands of a few power-holders’ (Lipset, 1994, p. 403).
176 Dorota Pietrzyk-Reeves
ctures (Minker, 2015, p. 59). Its ethical dimension, which became the source
of criticism for many empirically-minded scholars, allows for an accommoda-
tion of fact-value distinction. It comes with the acknowledgment that our poli-
tical world is not only the world of facts, but also of values and value judgments.
We would not be able to make sense of social facts without the ability to express
meaningful statements as to what benefits human flourishing and well-being.
One of the key institutions in today’s international relations, deeply embodied
in the constitutions of most states, is the institution of human rights and their
protection. Its justification can hardly be presented without a normative politi-
cal theory that prescribes the values which any decent (to use Rawls’ term) po-
litical community must observe. This minimal standard or goal since the end of
the Second World War has been defined as protection of basic human rights in
the light of the UN 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The langua-
ge of natural human rights was first used by political philosophers of the seven-
teenth and eighteenth centuries and deeply influenced the two very first docu-
ments that invoke rights as fundamental constitutional principles, the American
Declaration of Independence and the French Declaration of the Rights of Man
and Citizen. Any descriptive or empirical theory of politics can only tell us how
well basic human rights are respected in a given political context, but it cannot
tell us why they should be protected in the first place.
gest form is often deductive which means that in order to justify a principle (e.g.
human rights) a more general, higher-level principle or norm is provided from
which the first can be deducted (e.g. human dignity or human nature, or the
categorical imperative), sometimes along with certain generalizations (Moon,
2015). If these higher-level principles or first premises of a normative theory
are supposed to provide justification they must be treated as self-evident, abso-
lute, universal and invariant. This raises obvious problems often noted by critics
of any foundationalism as to the recognition of the non-arbitrary nature of such
principles. An interesting response to this problem can be found in John Stew-
art Mill and his attempt to justify the greatest happiness principle or the princi-
ple of utility. Mill asserted that ‘Questions of ultimate ends are not amenable to
direct proof ’ (Mill, 2003, p. 12). It is our intellect that treats some considerations
as self-evident and therefore worth upholding or not.
The fact that at least a certain part of a normative political theory cannot have
any obvious reference to empirical phenomena reflects the very nature of norma-
tive theorizing and not its problems. And if indeed many works in political theory
‘have ignored the findings of mainstream political scholars who strive to uncover
the salient facts of political life, fleeting as those may be’ (Ricci, 1984, p. 321), this
should not be taken as an argument against normative political theory.
Normative political theory and empirical political studies do not need to be
put in two separate boxes and treated as competing approaches. As many stud-
ies suggest there is a need for both approaches in political science and their di-
alogue can increase our understanding of politics (Morrell, 1999, p. 293). Nor-
mative theory can guide empirical research while empirical research can have
positive impact on normative theory (Bauböck, 2008, p. 40). The view prevail-
ing in the 1960s and 1970s that political theory has turned away from much po-
litical science and there is no compromise between the two (Kateb, 1977, p. 136)
no longer stands. Instead, more and more political theories benefit from empiri-
cal research that explores the ways politics functions in the real world while em-
pirical research needs some kind of guidance when it comes to important ques-
tions, and justification. So, for instance, empirical studies of multiculturalism are
often done in light of certain normative standards as to what the desirable mod-
el of coexistence between various cultural groups should be; they can test the
applicability of such models and formulate hypotheses upon what does or does
not function empirically and why. Normative philosophical accounts of multi-
culturalism proved quite influential in the 1990s, shaping debates on the sub-
ject not only in academia, but also in public life. As Will Kymlicka reminds us,
Charles Taylor’s essay “Multiculturalism and the Politics of Recognition” (1992)
was translated into numerous languages and cited in discussions of multicultur-
alism not only in Paris or Tokyo, but also in the highlands of Bolivia (Kymlicka,
Normative Political Theory 183
2010, p. 257). Major studies on the subject undertaken in the last two decades by
Kymlicka are a good example of a dialogue between the two approaches. Nor-
mative theories of multiculturalism reflect certain facts and inform certain poli-
cies; this allows empirical researchers who deal with multicultural policies to use
them. These policies cannot be seen as completely detached from certain moral
standards which need to be delineated in the first place.
Another example is participatory democratic theory which starts with nor-
mative assumptions as to the value of active civic participation in a democratic
order, and can be further developed through empirical research that aims to ex-
plore the conditions that make such participation a viable option for citizens
(Pietrzyk-Reeves, 2008). In this sense, the principles of political philosophy
should be practical, which means that it should be able to tell us what needs to be
done in order to make some principles a viable option. For example, what needs
to be done or what conditions or opportunities need to be in place to make po-
litical participation a desirable goal for citizens. Thus theorists of participatory
democracy might want to focus not only on opportunities for participation, but
also on a more practical question of how those opportunities ought to be institu-
tionalized (Morrell, 1999, p. 294).
Not all of political philosophy or normative theory in international relations
will have this practical goal. First of all there are some limits as to what norma-
tive theory may offer in terms of practical solutions (as they cannot be tested
empirically in a laboratory). And secondly, normative theory shall retain its pre-
scriptive, justificatory and evaluative aspects as valuable in themselves no matter
what its practical side might be.
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