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Chapter 11: The modern state

Chapter 11: The modern state

pp. 170-184

Authors

, Associate Professor in International Relations in the School of Political Science and International Studies at the University of Queensland
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Summary

Introduction

This chapter introduces the principal actor in international relations: the sovereign state. It begins by defining the state. Second, it explores the origins of the state in the transition from the Medieval to the modern world. Third, it examines the concept of sovereignty, especially as it was enunciated in early modern political thought. Fourth, it surveys different historical explanations of how the sovereign state triumphed over alternative forms of political society. Finally, it surveys some of the continuing debates about the morality and utility of the modern state.

What is a state?

The state may not be the only actor in world politics (see Chapter 23), but it is widely recognised as the one that has the greatest impact on people's lives. It is, as John Dunn (2000: 66) says, ‘the principal institutional site of political experience’. This is why the title of J.D.B. Miller's book, A World of States (1981), seems like such an apt description of international relations. But although we live in a world of states today, it was not always thus. At various moments in time, city-states, empires, feudal states, absolutist states or nation-states have been the dominant institutional form. So, although humanity has always been divided into separate political societies, the character of these societies has varied both historically and geographically. Sovereign states are distinctly modern inventions, and how long they will remain the principal institutional site of politics is a contentious issue, with some scholars suggesting that globalisation may be eclipsing the sovereign state (see Chapter 28). Whether or not the sovereign state is declining in importance, moral doubts about it continue to find expression. The state is, in many respects, a perpetually controversial subject precisely because it has been so central to domestic and international political life since the sixteenth century.

It is worth noting at the outset that a modern state, in its simplest sense, refers to an abstract entity comprising a government, a population and a territory (see Box 11.1). Much more needs to be said about this abstract entity, but for the moment it is enough to note that it possesses ‘a collective personality which makes it immortal’ (van Creveld 1999: 258).

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