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PUB2601 May/June (Portfolio) Memo | Due 22 May 2026

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PUB2601 May/June (Portfolio) Memo | Due 22 May 2026. All questions fully answered. QUESTION 1: KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING Discuss the substance of the social contract theory and briefly analyse the central arguments of the different social contract theorists. [25]

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 QUESTION 1: KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING

1. Discuss the substance of the social contract theory and briefly analyse the central arguments
of the different social contract theorists.

Introduction
The social contract theory represents one of the most enduring frameworks for understanding the
relationship between citizens and the state, the justification of political authority, and the foundation
of moral and legal obligations. As a heuristic device, it has shaped Western political philosophy for
centuries while continuing to inform contemporary debates about governance, service delivery, and
constitutional legitimacy in the public sector (Boucher & Kelly, 1994).

The Substance of Social Contract Theory
At its core, social contract theory posits that political authority is artificial and conventional rather
than divinely or naturally ordained (Lessnoff, 1986). The theory addresses a fundamental question:
why should individuals submit to governmental authority when they could theoretically remain free
from external control? The answer lies in the concept of an agreement—whether explicit or
implicit—through which individuals collectively consent to surrender certain freedoms in exchange
for security, order, and the protection of their remaining rights.

The substance of the social contract is therefore twofold. First, it describes a hypothetical
pre-political condition, often termed the “state of nature,” which serves as a baseline for evaluating
the legitimacy of political arrangements (Hampton, 1986). Second, it outlines the terms of the
agreement itself: what rights individuals forfeit, what powers they vest in a sovereign or government,
and what benefits they receive in return. Crucially, the social contract is not necessarily a historical
event but a logical construct used to test the moral justifiability of political systems (Dworkin, 1978).

In the public sector context, social contract theory provides a foundational justification for taxation,
public service delivery, regulatory authority, and the enforcement of laws. When a government
provides education, healthcare, policing, or social welfare, it does so not merely as an act of
benevolence but as fulfilment of an implicit contractual obligation to citizens who have ceded
autonomy for collective benefit (Rawls, 1971).

Analysis of Central Arguments of Different Social Contract Theorists

Thomas Hobbes: Security and Absolute Sovereignty
Thomas Hobbes, writing in the aftermath of the English Civil War, presents the most pessimistic
account of the state of nature. In Leviathan (1651), Hobbes argues that without a common power,
human life is “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short” (Hobbes, 1651/1996, p. 84). The state of
nature is a condition of perpetual war of all against all, driven by equal vulnerability, scarcity of
resources, and the rational anticipation of attack. For Hobbes, the central problem is security, and the
solution is an absolute sovereign.

, Hobbes’s social contract is a unilateral act: individuals contract with each other to give up their
natural rights to everything, vesting all authority in a sovereign (a person or assembly) who is not
party to the contract (Hampton, 1986). The sovereign possesses absolute, indivisible, and perpetual
power to enforce peace. Once established, subjects cannot legitimately rebel, because any rebellion
would return them to the terrifying state of nature. The only right retained is the right to life: if the
sovereign threatens a subject’s life directly, the contract dissolves for that individual (Lessnoff,
1986).

Practical application in the public sector: Hobbes’s theory justifies strong state authority where
public safety and order are paramount. In contexts of civil unrest, terrorism, or pandemics,
governments invoke Hobbesian logic to impose curfews, surveillance, or emergency powers. For
example, during the COVID-19 pandemic, many governments restricted movement and assembly,
arguing that temporary surrender of liberties was necessary to preserve life and order (Gostin &
Wiley, 2020). In the public sector, Hobbesian reasoning underpins criminal justice systems, national
security agencies, and disaster management frameworks where immediate threats override individual
preferences.

John Locke: Consent, Property, and Limited Government
John Locke offers a markedly different account in his Second Treatise of Government (1689). The
Lockean state of nature is not a war of all against all but a condition of “perfect freedom” and
“equality” governed by the law of nature, which obliges all not to harm others in their life, health,
liberty, or possessions (Locke, 1689/1988, p. 269). However, the state of nature suffers from
inconveniences: lack of established law, indifferent judges, and insufficient enforcement power.
Property is particularly vulnerable, as there is no common authority to settle disputes or punish
transgressions.

Locke’s social contract, therefore, creates civil society to protect pre-existing natural rights,
especially property. Individuals consent to give up their executive power of the law of nature (the
right to punish) to a legislative and executive authority, but they do not surrender their fundamental
rights (Boucher & Kelly, 1994). Crucially, government is a trust: if it violates natural rights or
governs without consent, citizens have a right to revolt. Locke thus justifies limited government,
separation of powers, and the right of revolution.

Practical application in the public sector: Locke’s theory is foundational to constitutional democracy,
property rights protections, and administrative justice. In the public sector, it informs independent
judiciaries, due process requirements, and mechanisms for accountability such as ombudsmen and
public protector institutions (Rawls, 1971). For example, when a South African citizen challenges an
unlawful eviction by a municipal housing authority, they rely on Lockean principles that government
must respect property rights and that legislatures cannot act arbitrarily. Similarly, public consultation
processes in policymaking reflect Lockean consent: governments do not merely command but justify
policies to citizens who retain ultimate judgement.

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