Download full text
(external source)
Citation Suggestion
Please use the following Persistent Identifier (PID) to cite this document:
https://doi.org/10.17645/pag.9781
Exports for your reference manager
The Conspiracist Theory of Power
[journal article]
Abstract In recent years, conspiracy theories have surged in democratic politics, enabling illiberal parties, movements, and politicians to win the votes of constituents who are disillusioned with mainstream democratic politics. Yet scholars of democratic backsliding have not fully grappled with the implicat... view more
In recent years, conspiracy theories have surged in democratic politics, enabling illiberal parties, movements, and politicians to win the votes of constituents who are disillusioned with mainstream democratic politics. Yet scholars of democratic backsliding have not fully grappled with the implications of conspiracism as the basis for a governing ideology. In this article, we argue that challenges to liberal democracy can be better understood by analyzing conspiracism as a theory of power in its own right. Conspiracy theories are formulated to identify the ultimate source of power in society. They attribute the occurrence of major historical and political events to malevolent actors and their secret activities, and their ideas can be fleshed out into a political program. We offer a conceptualization of conspiracism as a theory of power and analyze it alongside liberal and populist theories of power. We examine four facets of political theory - who should govern, who threatens power, what governing entails, and the constraints on power - to identify divergences and unexpected affinities across these bodies of thought. We argue that conspiracism is not merely a critique of power, but an intellectual foundation for a political regime embodied in autocracy, oligarchy, or an alternate technocracy. This analysis informs our understanding of a serious yet under‐theorized threat to liberal democracy.... view less
Keywords
dictatorship; populism; technocracy; oligarchy; political development; theory of democracy; political ideology; democracy
Classification
Basic Research, General Concepts and History of Political Science
Free Keywords
autocracy; conspiracy theories; democratic theory
Document language
English
Publication Year
2025
Journal
Politics and Governance, 13 (2025)
Issue topic
Debating Democracy: Concepts, Histories, and Controversies
ISSN
2183-2463
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed