Political Obligation
Political obligation is the supposed moral duty of citizens to obey the law of their state, and this topic asks whether such a general duty exists and, if so, what grounds it.
Definition
Political obligation is a moral requirement to comply with the directives of one's political authority — paradigmatically, to obey the law — binding citizens generally and in virtue of their membership rather than the independent merits of each law.
Scope
Covers the leading candidate grounds for a duty to obey — consent, fair play, gratitude, natural duty, and associative obligation — and the 'anarchist' challenge that no such general obligation can be established. It is closely tied to consent and to philosophical anarchism.
Core questions
- Is there a general moral duty to obey the law of one's state?
- If so, what grounds it — consent, fairness, gratitude, or natural duty?
- Does obligation bind all citizens equally, or only some?
- How does political obligation relate to the state's legitimacy?
Key concepts
- the duty to obey the law
- consent
- fair play
- gratitude
- natural duty of justice
- associative obligation
- the particularity requirement
Key theories
- The principle of fair play
- Hart proposes, and later theorists develop, the idea that those who accept the benefits of a cooperative scheme have a fair-play obligation to bear their share of its burdens, including obeying its rules.
- The fairness account defended
- Klosko argues that a suitably restricted principle of fairness can ground political obligation for the provision of presumptive public goods that are essential and benefit recipients whether or not they choose to accept them.
- The anarchist critique
- Simmons examines consent, fair-play, gratitude, and natural-duty arguments and concludes that none establishes a general political obligation binding citizens to their particular state, supporting a weak philosophical anarchism.
History
Long treated as settled by consent within the social-contract tradition, political obligation became a distinct analytic problem in the mid-20th century. Hart (1955) and Rawls articulated the fair-play principle; Simmons's Moral Principles and Political Obligations (1979) mounted an influential challenge, prompting fairness-based defences such as Klosko's.
Debates
- Is there any general obligation to obey?
- Whether any principle successfully grounds a general duty to obey one's own state, as fairness theorists hold, or whether all such arguments fail, as Simmons's anarchist conclusion claims.
- The particularity problem
- Whether a proposed ground of obligation ties citizens specifically to their own state rather than to states or to justice generally, a test many candidate principles struggle to meet.
Key figures
- A. John Simmons
- H. L. A. Hart
- George Klosko
- John Rawls
Related topics
Seminal works
- simmons1979
- klosko1992
Frequently asked questions
- What is the principle of fair play?
- It is the idea that someone who voluntarily accepts the benefits of a cooperative scheme acquires an obligation to do their fair share in sustaining it, which some theorists use to ground a duty to obey the law.