STATE
State
"Nations" or "states"
These two terms are clearly related, yet they
must with equal clarity be seen to be separate.
To be sure, the two are often used
interchangeably, in an indiscriminate fashion (such as the "United
Nations", which is actually an association of states, not of nations). In
laymen's minds, the difference between the two concepts is vague - to such an
extent that the slightly old-fashioned term nation-state is sometimes
used.
Bismarck, and his exhortations (urge
earnestly) to the German people to ("think with their blood") led to
a general feeling that states must of necessity be established on the basis of
national identity. Despite the fact that there were plenty of successful
examples to the contrary (Switzerland, for one).
Defining the idea of nation
Humans are tribal animals, with a tendency to
arrange themselves in small groups around
dominant males and females - much like a
group of monkeys in the trees. The fundamental
element of human organization is a local and
tribal group, which, in more advanced societies, forms the basis for a more
elaborate structure of civilized society on top of the tribal base. The idea of
a nation (from the Latin word natio which derives from natus
"(of) birth") implies a common blood relationship.
In fact, this
relationship is rarely actual - more often, it derives from a postulated common
ancestor. This common ancestor may be an actual historical figure, but most of
the time, he or she is a mythical being.
Tribalism
aside, the bonds that bind a group of people into a nation are more complex
than mere blood relationships (real or imagined). This relationship really only
holds true at the lowest levels of society (and even then, local hierarchies
related by blood have become rare in the modern world).
As
civilized society grows ever more complex, it is often the case that
nationality is a function of more complex factors - a shared heritage or blood
relationship being only one of them. Language is a factor, definitely - yet
there are nations that exist quite happily with multiple languages (of course,
for every success story, there is a counterexample of national disintegration
along linguistic lines). Nevertheless, nations with a single dominant language
often use this language to define who they are. This is particularly the case
in those situations where the language is very difficult for outsiders to learn
(e.g. Danish, Finnish, Japanese). Culture, and the artifacts of culture, play a
part in defining a nation - ask the Greeks about the importance of the Elgin
marbles, or a Dane about the Golden Horns. Often, cultural artifacts that have
changed hands between national groups become sources of deep-felt national
outrage (such as the Elgin marbles, or the Isted Lion), icons of lasting
disaffection between the nations involved. The proponents of nationalist
ideology often lay forth the postulate that their nation is an immutable and
"original" one - that the basic tenets and attributes of their nation
are fixed, and have been a part of the national makeup since before recorded
history. For instance, German nationalists hark back to the defeat of the Roman
legions in Teutoburger Forest by the Germanic tribal leader Arminius
("Hermann"). Yet, evidence is incontrovertible that no nations are
immutable entities.
Paradoxically, if there is
a constant of human society, it is change, and this ensures that a nation of today
is different from the nation of the same name that existed a generation ago. Nations
are evolving and changing all the time. Summing up, some of the attributes of
nationhood are:
•A common postulated
interrelationship - a "blood" bond between members. This blood
relationship may be actual, but more often, it derives from myth.
•A shared cultural
heritage. This heritage, and particularly the cultural artifacts (and sometimes
also, institutional structures) that it has created, represents the
"patrimony" of the nation, and is often invested with considerable
sentimental value, to the extent that attacks on it are responded to with
violent emotion.
•Linguistic coherence, in the form of one or
more languages identified with the national identity.
•The more unique or difficult these languages
are, the stronger the emotional attachment to them, as something that must be
defended.
•In the world of mass telecommunications and
the omnipresence of English as a lingua franca, bitter struggles are
taking place all over the world to protect the national languages (most
notably, in Iceland and France).
•A sense of identification by members with
the nation. The idea of national affiliation is a deep-rooted one in the human
psyche, and members of a nation suffer a very visceral response to any threat
against it, real or perceived.
The state - an institution without
sentiment
·
Originally,
the word state derives from an Italian term, lo stato, coined by
Machiavelli to describe the whole of the social hierarchy that governs and
rules a country. Over the centuries, the term has come to take on a more
sophisticated meaning - yet, in many ways, it is as vague a term as nation.
·
A state,
then, may be defined as an institutional structure charged with exercising
authority within a definable jurisdictional purview (which is often territorial
in nature).
·
Often, political theorists have relied on the
definition offered by Max Weber: ".... a relation of men dominating
men, a relation supported by means of legitimate (i.e. considered to be
legitimate) violence" - Max Weber: Politik als Beruf, 1919 .
·
The state is thus the supreme legitimate
authority (whatever "legitimate" may be taken to mean, in the
particular context) entrusted with the exercise of violent force over a group of
people.
·
Conspicuously absent from this definition is
the concept of territorial authority, yet the legitimacy and jurisdictional
authority of states is tied so intimately to this attribute that it cannot be
ignored.
Summing up, the following
attributes are then the characteristics of a state:
1.Monopoly
on exercise of force.
2.Legitimacy,
as perceived by the governed.
3.Institutional
structures established to handle governmental tasks, including, but not limited
to, the exercise of force.
4.Control
over a territory - absolute or partial.
Statehood
Article 1 of the Montevideo
Convention on Rights and Duties of States 1933 has identified following
qualifications of statehood:
·
a permanent population
·
a definite territory
·
a government, and
·
a capacity to enter into relations with other
states.
Elements of State
·
A state has space or territory that has
internationally recognized boundaries (boundary disputes are OK).
·
A state has people who live there on an
ongoing basis.
·
A state has economic activity and an
organized economy.
·
A state regulates foreign and domestic trade
and issues money.
·
A
state has the power of social engineering, such as education.
·
A
state has a transportation system for moving goods and people.
·
A
state has a government that provides public services and police power.
·
A
state has sovereignty. No other State should have power over the country's
territory.
·
A
state has external recognition. It has been "voted into the club" by
other countries.