dc.contributorPontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. Instituto de Ciencia Política
dc.creatorFigueroa Álvarez, Valentín Iván
dc.date.accessioned2023-06-13T14:56:24Z
dc.date.available2023-06-13T14:56:24Z
dc.date.created2023-06-13T14:56:24Z
dc.date.issued2023
dc.identifier10.1353/wp.2023.0006
dc.identifier1086-3338
dc.identifier0043-8871
dc.identifierhttps://repositorio.uc.cl/handle/11534/73457
dc.identifierWOS:000969187000005
dc.description.abstractAfter the seventeenth century, rulers across Europe attempted reforms to replace amateur administrators with professional bureaucrats. The success of administrative reforms hinged on whether rulers could compensate entrenched officeholders and recruit salaried employees. The author demonstrates that the extent to which these conditions were met at the time of reforms depended on whether states had experienced a Protestant Reformation in the sixteenth century. This article shows how the Reformation, which involved the expropriation of the Catholic Church's assets, set in motion two processes. First, to finance their wars, Protestant rulers used revenue from confiscated assets instead of selling proprietary offices, leading to fewer venal officeholders who resisted administrative reforms. Second, expropriations made churches poorer and reduced the number of plum jobs in the clergy, incentivizing a reallocation of educational investments from religious knowledge to secular skills more useful for state administration. This distinctive Protestant developmental path hastened the demise of the patrimonial state. By 1789, the only major territorial states that were bureaucratic were Protestant.
dc.languageen
dc.publisherCambridge University Press
dc.rightsacceso restringido
dc.subjectState formation
dc.subjectBureaucracy
dc.subjectHistorical Political Economy
dc.subjectProtestant Reformation
dc.subjectEuropean State-Building
dc.titleThe Protestant Road to Bureaucracy
dc.typeartículo


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