Ideological State Apparatuses
Ideological State Apparatuses (ISAs) are the institutions through which ideology is reproduced and transmitted — not by force but by routine. Louis Althusser distinguished ISAs from Repressive State Apparatuses (the police, military, courts, prisons) on the basis of their modality of operation: where repressive apparatuses function by violence, ISAs function by habit and recognition. Schools, families, churches, trade unions, media, and cultural institutions are all ISAs, not because they consciously conspire to maintain domination but because their ordinary operations systematically produce subjects who consent to the existing order.
The systems-theoretic insight is that ISAs are distributed reinforcement networks. Each ISA operates with relative autonomy — schools are not directly controlled by the state in liberal democracies — but their combined effect is structural stability. The autonomy is functional, not incidental: an ISA that is too obviously an arm of the state loses its credibility, and credibility is the medium in which ideology operates. The most effective ISA is the one that appears to serve a non-ideological function (education, entertainment, family life) while quietly interpolating subjects into the dominant ideological frame.
See also Ideology, Interpellation, Cultural Hegemony, Manufacturing Consent.