Waning Sovereignty? The Kindred Myths of “Origins” and “Vanishing” of the State

HTML  XML Download Download as PDF (Size: 393KB)  PP. 394-420  
DOI: 10.4236/ojps.2017.73032    1,060 Downloads   2,892 Views  
Author(s)

ABSTRACT

This article discusses, from an historical-neo-institutionalist and relational-strate- gic perspective, the postmodern thesis of the end of the state due to the increasing processes of world globalization. The main hypothesis is that the arguments which predict the structural crisis or the disappearance of the State in the age of neo-liberal globalization have their roots in a theoretically and historically implausible concept of sovereignty that ignores and distorts central aspects of statehood and state-building in terms of both institutional structure and political action. The myth of the “origins” of the State in Medieval or Renaissance times shares with the postmodern vision of the “vanishing” of the state, the same underlying misconception of the scope and limits of the state power. Sovereignty (the monopolization of political power) was always a claim, a desiderata, a contested andunfinished political project not an accomplished empirical fact.

Share and Cite:

Maiz, R. (2017) Waning Sovereignty? The Kindred Myths of “Origins” and “Vanishing” of the State. Open Journal of Political Science, 7, 394-420. doi: 10.4236/ojps.2017.73032.

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.