Abstract :
In this essay, I examine political sociology under the light of the process of globalization
and argue that it needs to change its focus and expanse to sustain itself in the new global
society. I argue that political sociology as a field is marked by its own western traditional
understanding of bases of power. I critically examine the three traditional approaches to
understanding power in sociology: pluralism, elite theory and Marxist theory of power and
points to the strength and weaknesses of each approach. I draw upon examples from
politics in the Muslim world to point to the inability to a western centered political
sociology to account for the religious basis of political power. The contemporary global
politics, I argue, is held in the shadows of 1989, with the demise of Soviet union and the
consolidation of capitalism into one global system—and the resistance to this has
increasingly become fragmented. For a fully rounded analysis of the contemporary political
situation in the global society, political sociology will have to include new bases of power
along with the historical conceptions and it will have to bridge its nation-centric concepts
into more transnational concepts to capture changing nature of global politics.