@prefix n9j: <http://data.loterre.fr/ark:/67375/N9J> .
@prefix skos: <http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#> .
@prefix owl: <http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#> .
@prefix isothes: <http://purl.org/iso25964/skos-thes#> .

n9j:-K52QQZD8-F
  skos:prefLabel "theories of ethics"@en ;
  a skos:Concept ;
  skos:narrower n9j:-BB0JDK0W-Q .

n9j: a skos:ConceptScheme .
n9j:-N2TJL79N-8
  skos:prefLabel "power and authority"@en ;
  a skos:Concept ;
  skos:narrower n9j:-BB0JDK0W-Q .

n9j:-RHQN0SDC-5
  skos:prefLabel "constitutional thought"@en ;
  a skos:Concept ;
  skos:narrower n9j:-BB0JDK0W-Q .

n9j:-BB0JDK0W-Q
  owl:sameAs <https://concepts.sagepub.com/social-science/concept/social_contract_theory> ;
  skos:definition "Social contract theory is an approach to questions of political legitimacy and obligation that seeks to ground claims to sovereignty on an agreement among people to form a political community. Social contract theory was the dominant approach to such questions in early modern Europe, and numbered among its proponents many of the major political theorists of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, including Hugo Grotius, Thomas Hobbes, Samuel von Pufendorf, John Locke, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and Immanuel Kant. [Source: Encyclopedia of Political Theory; Social Contract Theory]"@en ;
  a skos:Concept ;
  skos:inScheme n9j: ;
  skos:broader n9j:-RHQN0SDC-5, n9j:-N2TJL79N-8, n9j:-K52QQZD8-F ;
  skos:prefLabel "social contract theory"@en .

n9j:-concepts
  a isothes:ConceptGroup ;
  skos:prefLabel "concepts"@en ;
  skos:member n9j:-BB0JDK0W-Q .

