User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
- /steɪts/
Noun
states- Plural of state
See also
- the States the USA
Verb
states- third-person singular of state
Extensive Definition
A state is a political association
with effective sovereignty over a
geographic area. These may
be nation
states,
sub-national states or multinational
states. A state usually includes the set of institutions that claim the
authority to make the
rules that govern the exercise of coercive violence for the people
of the society in that territory, though its status as a state
often depends in part on being recognized by a number of other
states as having internal and external sovereignty over it. In
sociology, the state
is normally identified with these institutions: in Max Weber's
influential definition, it is that organization that has a
"monopoly
on the legitimate use of physical force within a given
territory," which may include the armed
forces, civil
service or state bureaucracy, courts, and police.
Usage
Although the term often includes broadly all
institutions of government or rule—ancient
and modern—the modern state system bears a number of
characteristics that were first consolidated in western Europe,
beginning in earnest in the 15th
century, when the term "state" also acquired its current
meaning. Thus the word is often used in a strict sense to refer
only to modern political systems.
Within a federal system, the term
state also refers to political units, not completely sovereign
themselves; however, these systems are subject to the authority of
a constitution
defining a federal union which is partially or co-sovereign with
them. Thus we find the "states
and territories of Australia" and the "states" in the
United
States of America.
In casual usage, the terms "country," "nation,"
and "state" are often used as if they were synonymous; but in a more strict
usage they can be distinguished:
- Country denotes a geographical area.
- Nation denotes a people who are believed to or deemed to share common customs, origins, and history. However, the adjectives national and international also refer to matters pertaining to what are strictly states, as in national capital, international law.
- State refers to the set of governing institutions that has sovereignty over a definite territory.
Etymology
The word state and its cognates in other European languages (stato in Italian,
état in French,
Staat in German
and estado in Spanish
and Portuguese)
ultimately derive from the Latin STATVS, meaning
"condition" or "status". With the revival of the Roman law in
the 14th
century in Europe, this Latin term was used to refer to the
legal standing of persons (such as the various "estates
of the realm" - noble, common, and clerical), and in particular
the special status of the king. The word was also associated with
Roman ideas (dating back to Cicero) about the
"status rei publicae", the "condition of the republic." In time,
the word lost its reference to particular social groups and became
associated with the legal order of the entire society and the
apparatus of its enforcement.
In other languages meaning can be different.
Polish 'państwo' can be derived from the word 'pan'=lord, the one
who has power ('Lord Jesus'='Pan Jezus'). 'Państwo' therefore
denotes a state, when someone is governing (is in charge). The word
'państwo' also suggest some kind of social organisation, as its
second meaning in Polish relates to "family" (państwo Smith = the
Smiths).
It has also been claimed that the word "state"
originates from the medieval state or regal chair upon
which the head of
state (usually a monarch) would sit. By process of metonymy, the word state became
used to refer to both the head of state and the power entity he
represented (though the former meaning has fallen out of use). Two
quotations which reference these different meanings, both commonly,
though probably apocryphally, attributed to
King Louis XIV of France, are "L'État, c'est moi" ("I am the
State") and "Je m'en vais, mais l'État demeurera toujours." ("I am
going away, but the State will always remain"). A similar
association of terms can today be seen in the practice of referring
to government buildings
as having authority, for example "The White House
today released a press statement...".
Empirical and juridical senses of the word state
The word state has both an empirical and a juridical sense, i.e., entities can be states either de facto or de jure or both.Empirically (or de facto), an entity is a state
if, as in Max Weber's
influential definition, it is that organization that has a
'monopoly
on legitimate violence' over a specific territory. Such an entity
imposes its own legal order over a territory, even if it is not
legally recognized as a state by other states (e.g., the Somali region of
Somaliland).
Juridically (or de jure), an entity is a state in
international
law if it is recognized as such by other states, even if it
does not actually have a monopoly on the legitimate use of force
over a territory. Only an entity juridically recognized as a state
can enter into many kinds of international agreements and be
represented in a variety of legal forums, such as the United
Nations.
States, government types, and political systems
The concept of the state can be distinguished from two related concepts with which it is sometimes confused: the concept of a form of government or regime, such as democracy or dictatorship, and the concept of a political system. The form of government identifies only one aspect of the state, namely, the way in which the highest political offices are filled and their relationship to each other and to society. It does not include other aspects of the state that may be very important in its everyday functioning, such as the quality of its bureaucracy. For example, two democratic states may be quite different if one has a capable, well-trained bureaucracy or civil service while the other does not. Thus generally speaking the term "state" refers to the instruments of political power, while the terms regime or form of government refers more to the way in which such instruments can be accessed and employed.Some scholars have suggested that the term
"state" is too imprecise and loaded to be used productively in
sociology and political science, and ought to be replaced by the
more comprehensive term "political system." The "political system"
refers to the ensemble of all social
structures that function to produce collectively binding
decisions in a society. In modern times, these would include the
political regime,
political
parties, and various sorts of organizations. The term
"political
system" thus denotes a broader concept than the state.
The historical development of the state
The earliest forms of the state emerged whenever it became possible to centralize power in a durable way. Agriculture and writing are almost everywhere associated with this process. Agriculture allowed for the production and storing of a surplus. This in turn allowed and encouraged the emergence of a class of people who controlled and protected the agricultural stores and thus did not have to spend most of their time providing for their own subsistence. In addition, writing (or the equivalent of writing, like Inca quipus) because it made possible the centralization of vital information.Some political philosophers believe the origins
of the state lie ultimately in the tribal culture which developed
with human sentience, the template for which was the alleged primal
"alpha-male" microsocieties of our earlier ancestors, which were
based on the coercion of the weak by the strong. However
anthropologists point out that extant band- and tribe-level
societies are notable for their lack of centralized authority, and
that highly stratified societies--i.e., states--constitute a
relatively recent break with the course of human history.
The state in classical antiquity
The history of the state in the West usually
begins with classical
antiquity. During that period, the state took a variety of
forms, none of them very much like the modern
state. There were monarchies whose power (like that of the
Egyptian
Pharaoh)
was based on the religious function of the king and his control of
a centralized army. There were also large, quasi-bureaucratized
empires, like the Roman
empire, which depended less on the religious function of the ruler
and more on effective military and legal organizations and the
cohesion of an aristocracy.
Perhaps the most important political innovations
of classical antiquity came from the Greek
city-states and the Roman
Republic. The Greek
city-states before the 4th century granted
citizenship rights to their free population, and in Athens
these rights were combined with a directly democratic form of government
that was to have a long afterlife in political thought and
history.
In contrast, Rome
developed from a monarchy
into a republic,
governed by a senate
dominated by the Roman aristocracy. The Roman political system
contributed to the development of law, constitutionalism
and to the distinction between the private and the
public spheres.
From the feudal state to the modern state in the West
The story of the development of the specifically modern state in the West typically begins with the dissolution of the western Roman empire. This led to the fragmentation of the imperial state into the hands of private and decentralized lords whose political, judicial, and military roles corresponded to the organization of economic production. In these conditions, according to Marxists, the economic unit of society corresponded exactly to the state on the local level.The state-system of feudal Europe was an unstable
configuration of suzerains and anointed kings. A
monarch, formally at the head of a hierarchy of sovereigns, was not
an absolute power who could rule at will; instead, relations
between lords and monarchs were mediated by varying degrees of
mutual dependence, which was ensured by the absence of a
centralized system of taxation. This reality ensured
that each ruler needed to obtain the 'consent' of each estate in
the realm. This was not quite a 'state' in the Weberian sense
of the term, since the king did not monopolize either the power of
lawmaking (which was shared with the church) or the means of
violence (which were shared with the nobles).
The formalization of the struggles over taxation
between the monarch and other elements of society (especially the
nobility and the cities) gave rise to what is now called the
Standestaat, or
the state of Estates, characterized by parliaments in which key
social groups negotiated with the king about legal and economic
matters. These estates
of the realm sometimes evolved in the direction of
fully-fledged parliaments, but sometimes lost out in their
struggles with the monarch, leading to greater centralization of
lawmaking and coercive (chiefly military) power in his hands.
Beginning in the 15th
century, this centralizing process gave rise to the absolutist
state.
The modern state
The rise of the "modern state" as a public power constituting the supreme political authority within a defined territory is associated with western Europe's gradual institutional development beginning in earnest in the late 15th century, culminating in the rise of absolutism and capitalism.As Europe's dynastic states — England
under the Tudors,
Spain under
the Hapsburgs, and
France under
the Bourbons
— embarked on a variety of programs designed to increase
centralized political and economic control, they increasingly
exhibited many of the institutional features that characterize the
"modern state." This centralization of power involved the
delineation of political boundaries, as European monarchs gradually
defeated or co-opted other sources of power, such as the Church and
lesser nobility. In place of the fragmented system of feudal rule,
with its often indistinct territorial claims, large, unitary states
with extensive control over definite territories emerged. This
process gave rise to the highly centralized and increasingly
bureaucratic forms of absolute monarchical rule of the 17th and
18th centuries, when the principal features of the contemporary
state system took form, including the introduction of a standing
army, a central taxation system, diplomatic relations with
permanent embassies, and
the development of state economic policy—mercantilism.
Cultural and national homogenization figured
prominently in the rise of the modern state system. Since the
absolutist period, states have largely been organized on a national basis. The concept of a
national state, however, is not synonymous with nation-state.
Even in the most ethnically homogeneous societies
there is not always a complete correspondence between state and
nation, hence the active
role often taken by the state to promote nationalism through emphasis
on shared symbols and national identity.
It is in this period that the term "the state" is
first introduced into political discourse in more or less its
current meaning. Although Niccolò
Machiavelli is often credited with first using the term to
refer to a territorial sovereign government in the modern sense in
The
Prince, published in 1532, it is not until
the time of the British thinkers Thomas
Hobbes and John Locke and
the French thinker Jean Bodin
that the concept in its current meaning is fully developed.
Scholars working in the broad Weberian tradition,
by contrast, have often emphasized the institution-building effects
of war. For example,
Charles
Tilly has argued that the revenue-gathering imperatives forced
on nascent states by geopolitical competition and constant warfare
were mostly responsible for the development of the centralized,
territorial bureaucracies that
characterize modern states in Europe. States that were able to
develop centralized tax-gathering bureaucracies and to field mass
armies survived into the modern era; states that were not able to
do so did not.
State and civil society
The modern state is both separate from and
connected to civil
society. The nature of this connection has been the subject of
considerable attention in both analyses of state development and
normative theories of the state. Earlier thinkers, such as Thomas
Hobbes emphasized the supremacy of the state over society.
Later thinkers, by contrast, beginning with G. W. F.
Hegel, have tended to emphasize the points of contact between
them. Jürgen
Habermas, for example, has argued that civil society forms a
public
sphere, that is, a site of extra-institutional engagement with
matters of public interest autonomous from the state and yet
necessarily connected with it.
Some Marxist theorists, such as Antonio
Gramsci, have questioned the distinction between the state and
civil society altogether, arguing that the former is integrated
into many parts of the latter. Others, such as Louis
Althusser, maintain that civil organizations such as church, schools, and even trade unions
are part of an 'ideological state apparatus.' In this sense, the
state can fund a number of groups within society that, while
autonomous in principle, are dependent on state support.
Given the role that many social groups have in
the development of public policy and the extensive connections
between state bureaucracies and other institutions, it has become
increasingly difficult to identify the boundaries of the state.
Privatization,
nationalization,
and the creation of new regulatory bodies also change
the boundaries of the state in relation to society. Often the
nature of quasi-autonomous organizations is unclear, generating
debate among political scientists on whether they are part of the
state or civil society. Some political scientists thus prefer to
speak of policy networks and decentralized governance in modern
societies rather than of state bureaucracies and direct state
control over policy.
The state and the international system
Since the late 19th century the entirety of the world's inhabitable land has been parceled up into states with more or less definite borders claimed by various states. Earlier, quite large land areas had been either unclaimed or uninhabited, or inhabited by nomadic peoples who were not organized as states. Currently more than 200 states comprise the international community, with the vast majority of them represented in the United Nations.These states form what International
relations theorists call a system, where each state takes into
account the behavior of other states when making their own
calculations. From this point of view, states embedded in an
international system face internal and external security and
legitimation dilemmas. Recently the notion of an "international
community" has been developed to refer to a group of states who
have established rules,
procedures, and
institutions for the
conduct of their relations. In this way the foundation has been
laid for international law, diplomacy, formal regimes, and
organizations.
The state and supranationalism
In the late 20th century, the globalization of the world economy, the mobility of people and capital, and the rise of many international institutions all combined to circumscribe the freedom of action of states. These constraints on the state's freedom of action are accompanied in some areas, notably Western Europe, with projects for interstate integration such as the European Union. However, the state remains the basic political unit of the world, as it has been since the 16th century. The state is therefore considered the most central concept in the study of politics, and its definition is the subject of intense scholarly debate.The state and international law
By modern practice and the law of international relations, a state's sovereignty is conditional upon the diplomatic recognition of the state's claim to statehood. Degrees of recognition and sovereignty may vary. However, any degree of recognition, even recognition by a majority of the states in the international system, is not binding on third-party states.The legal criteria for statehood are not obvious.
Often, the laws are surpassed by political circumstances. However,
one of the documents often quoted on the matter is the Montevideo
Convention from 1933, the first
article of which states:
- The state as a person of international law should possess the following qualifications: (a) a permanent population; (b) a defined territory; (c) government; and (d) capacity to enter into relations with the other states.
Contemporary approaches to the study of the state
There are three main traditions within political
science and sociology that shape 'theories
of the state': the
pluralist, the Marxist, and the institutionalist. In
addition, anarchists present a tradition which is similar to, but
different from, the Marxian one.
Each of these theories has been employed to gain
understanding on the state, while recognizing its complexity.
Several issues underlie this complexity. First, the boundaries of
the state sector are not clearly defined, while they change
constantly. Second, the state is not only the site of conflict
between different organizations, but also internal conflict and
conflict within organizations. Some scholars speak of the 'state's
interest,' but there are often various interests within different
parts of the state that are neither solely state-centered nor
solely society-centered, but develop between different groups in
civil society and different state actors.
Pluralism
Pluralism has been very popular in the United
States. In fact, it might be seen as the dominant vision of
politics in that country.
Within this tradition, Robert Dahl
sees the state as either (1) a neutral arena for settling disputes
among contending interests or (2) a collection of agencies which
themselves act as simply another set of interest
groups. With power diffused across society among many competing
groups, state policy is a product of recurrent bargaining. Although
pluralism recognizes the existence of inequality, it asserts that
all groups have an opportunity to pressure the state. The pluralist
approach suggests that the modern democratic state's actions are
the result of pressures applied by a variety of organized
interests. Dahl called this kind of state a polyarchy.
In some ways, the development of the pluralist
school is a response to the "power elite"
theory presented in 1956 by the sociologist C. Wright
Mills concerning the U.S. and furthered by research by G.
William Domhoff, among others. In that theory, the most
powerful elements of the political, military, and economic parts of
U.S. society are united at the top of the political system, acting
to serve their common interests. The "masses" were left out of the
political process. In context, it might said that Mills saw the
U.S. elite as in part being very similar to that of the Soviet
Union, then the major geopolitical rival of the U.S. One
response was the sociologist Arnold M. Rose's publication of The
Power Structure: Political Process in American Society in 1967. He
argued that the distribution of power in the U.S. was more diffuse
and pluralistic in nature.
The importance of democratic elections of
political leaders in the U.S. (and not the Soviet Union) provides
evidence in favor of the pluralist perspective for that country. We
might reconcile power elite theory with pluralism in terms of
Joseph
Schumpeter's theory of democracy. To him, "democracy" involved
the (non-elite) masses choosing which elite would have the
power.
The absence of democratic elections do not rule
out pluralism, however. The old Soviet Union
is sometimes described as being ruled by an elite, which ran
society via a bureaucracy which united the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union, the military, and Gosplan, the
economic planning apparatus. However, bureaucratic rule from above
is never perfect. This meant that, so to some extent, Soviet
policies reflected a pluralistic competition of interest
groups within the Party, the military, and Gosplan, including
factory managers.
Marxism
Marxist theories of the state were relatively
influential in continental Europe in the 1960s and 1970s. But it is hard
to summarize the theory developed by Karl Marx and
Friedrich
Engels. After all, the effort by Hal Draper to
distill their political thinking in his Karl Marx's Theory of
Revolution (Monthly Review Press) took several thick volumes. But
many have tried.
For Marxist theorists, the role of modern states
is determined or related to their role in capitalist societies.
They would agree with Weber on the crucial role of coercion in
defining the state. (In fact, Weber himself starts his analysis
with a quotation from Leon Trotsky, a Bolshevik leader.) But
Marxists reject the mainstream liberal view that the state is
an institution established in the collective interest of society as
a whole (perhaps by a social
contract) to reconcile competing interests in the name of the
common good. Contrary to the pluralist vision, the state is not a
mere "neutral arena for settling disputes among contending
interests" because it leans heavily to support one interest group
(the capitalists) alone. Nor does the state usually act as merely a
"collection of agencies which themselves act as simply another set
of interest groups," again because of the state's systematic bias
toward serving capitalist interests.
In contrast to liberal or pluralist views, the
American economist Paul Sweezy
and other Marxian thinkers have pointed out that the main job of
the state is to protect capitalist property rights in the means
of production. At first, this seems hardly controversial. After
all, many economics and politics textbooks refer to the state's
crucial role in defending property rights and in enforcing
contracts. But the capitalists own a share of the means of
production that is far out of proportion to the capitalists' role
in the total population. More importantly, in Marxian theory,
ownership of the means of production gives that minority social
power over those who do not own the means of production (the
workers). Because of that power, i.e., the power to exploit and dominate the working class, the
state's defense of them is nothing but the use of coercion to
defend capitalism as a class
society. Instead of serving the interests of society as a
whole, in this view the state serves those of a small minority of
the population.
Among Marxists, as with other topics, there are
many debates about the nature and role of the capitalist state. One
division is between the "instrumentalists" and the
"structuralists."
On the first, some contemporary Marxists apply a
literal interpretation of the comment by Marx and Frederich Engels
in The
Communist Manifesto that "The executive of the modern state is
but a committee for managing the common affairs of the whole
bourgeoisie." In this tradition, Ralph
Miliband argued that the ruling class uses the state as its
instrument (tool) to dominate society in a straightforward way. For
Miliband, the state is dominated by an elite that comes from the
same background as the capitalist class and therefore shares many
of the same goals. State officials therefore share the same
interests as owners of capital and are linked to them through a
wide array of interpersonal and political ties. In many ways, this
theory is similar to the "power elite" theory of C. Wright
Mills.
Miliband's research is specific to the United
Kingdom, where the class system has traditionally been integrated
strongly into the educational system (Eton, Oxbridge, etc.)
and social networks. In the United
States, the educational system and social networks are more
heterogeneous and seem less class-dominated to many. But a social
connection between state managers and the capitalist class can be
seen in the dependence of the major politicians and their parties
on campaign contributions from the rich, on approval from the
capitalist-owned media, on advice from corporate-endowed "think
tanks," and the like.
In the second view, other Marxist theorists argue
that the exact names, biographies, and social roles of those who
control the state are irrelevant. Instead, they emphasize the
structural role of the state's activities. Heavily influenced by
the French philosopher Louis
Althusser, Nicos
Poulantzas, a Greek neo-Marxist
theorist argued that capitalist states do not always act on behalf
of the ruling class, and when they do, it is not necessarily the
case because state officials consciously strive to do so, but
because the structural position of the
state is configured in such a way to ensure that the interests of
capital are always dominant.
Poulantzas' main contribution to the Marxian
literature on the state was the concept of relative autonomy of the
state: state policies do not correspond exactly to the collective
or long-term interests of the capitalist class, but help maintain
and preserve capitalism over the long haul. The "power elite," if
one exists, may act in ways that go against the wishes of
capitalists. While Poulantzas' work on 'state autonomy' has served
to sharpen and specify a great deal of Marxist literature on the
state, his own framework came under criticism for its "structural
functionalism."
But this kind of criticism can be answered by
considering what happens if state managers do not work to favor the
operations of capitalism as a class society. They find that the
economy are punished by a capital
strike or capital
flight, encouraging higher unemployment, a decline in
tax receipts, and international financial problems. The decline in
tax revenues makes it more necessary to borrow from the
bourgeoisie. Because the latter will charge high interest rates
(especially to a government seen as hostile), the state's financial
problems deepen. Such events might be seen in Chile in 1973, under
Salvador
Allende's Unidad
Popular government. Added to the relatively "automatic"
workings of the economy (under the spur of profit-seeking
businesses) are the ways in which an anti-capitalist government
provokes anti-government conspiracies, including those by the
Central Intelligence Agency and local political forces, as
actually happened in 1973.
Unless they are ready to actually mobilize the
working population to revolutionize society and move beyond
capitalism, "sober" state managers will pull back from
anti-capitalist policies. In any event, they would likely never go
so far as to "rock the boat" because of their acceptance of the
dominant ideology
encouraged by the prevailing educational system.
Despite the debates among Marxist theorists of
the state, there are also many agreements. It is possible that both
"instrumental" and "structural" forces encourage political unity of
the state managers with the capitalist class. That is, both the
personal influence of capitalists and the societal constraints on
state activity play a role.
Of course, no matter how strong this link, the
Marx-Engels dictum that "The executive of the modern state is but a
committee for managing the common affairs of the whole bourgeoisie"
does not say that the executive will always do a good job in such
management. (As Poulantzas pointed out, the state maintains some
autonomy.) First, there is the problem of reconciling the
particular interests of individual capitalist organizations with
each other. For example, different parts of the media may disagree
on the nature of needed government regulations. Further, it is
often unclear what the long-run class interests of capitalists are,
beyond the simple defense of capitalist property rights. It may be
impossible to discover class interests until after the fact, i.e.,
after a policy has been implemented. Third, state managers may use
their administrative power to serve their own interests and even to
facilitate their entrance into the capitalist class.
Finally, pressure from working-class
organizations (labor unions, social-democratic parties, etc.) or
other non-capitalist forces (environmentalists, etc.) may push the
state from toeing the capitalist "line" exactly. In the end, these
problems imply that the state will always have some autonomy from
obeying the exact wishes of the capitalist class.
In this view, the Marxian theory of the state
does not really contradict the pluralist vision of the state
as an arena for the contention of many interest groups, including
those based in the state itself. Rather, the Marxian proposition is
that this multi-sided competition and its results are strongly
biased in the direction of reproducing the capitalist system over
time.
It should be emphasized that all of the Marxist
theories of the state discussed above refer only to the capitalist
state in normal times (without civil war and the like). During a
period of economic and social crisis, the absolute need to maintain
order may raise the power of the military -- and military goals --
in governmental affairs, sometimes even leading to the violation of
capitalist property rights.
In a non-capitalist system such as feudalism, Marxian historians
have said that the state did not really exist in the sense that it
does today (using Weber's definition). That is, the central state
did not monopolize force in a specific geographic area. The feudal
king typically had to depend on the military power of his "lieges."
This meant that the country was more of an alliance than a unified
whole. Further, the difference between the state and civil
society was weak: the feudal lords were not simply involved in
"economic" activity (production, sale, etc.) but also "political"
activity: they used force against their serfs (to extract rents),
while acting as judge, jury, and police.
Getting further beyond capitalism, Marxist theory
says that since the state is central to protecting class
inequality, it will "wither away" once class inequality of power is
abolished. In practice, no self-styled Marxist leader or government
has ever made attempts to move toward a society without a state. Of
course, that is to be expected. After all, no society has ever
completely abolished classes. In addition, no self-described
"socialist" country has been able to do without a military defense
against capitalist invasion or destabilization. Third, in Marxian
theory, impetus for the abolition of the state would not come from
the leaders or the government themselves as much as from the
working people that they are supposed to represent.
Anarchism
The anarchists share many of the Marxian
propositions about the state. But in contrast, anarchists argue
that a country's collective interests can be served without having
a centralized organization. The maintenance of law and order does
not require that there be a sector of society that monopolizes the
legitimate use of force. It is possible for society to prosper
without a state, even without a long period of classes "withering
away." In fact, anarchists see the state as a parasite that can and
should be abolished.
Thus, they oppose the state as a matter of
principle and reject the Marxian view that it may be needed
temporarily as part of a transition to socialism or communism. They propose
different strategies for the elimination of the state. There is a
dichotomy of views regarding its replacement. On the left are those
who propose non-coercive organizations to replace the state. On the
right are Anarcho-capitalists,
who envision a free market
guided by the invisible
hand offering critical or valuable functions traditionally
provided by the state.
Anarchists on the left consider the state to be
the institutionalization of domination and privilege. According to
key theorists, the state emerged to ratify and deepen the dominance
of the victors of history. Unlike Marxists,
left-wing anarchists believe that the state, while reflecting
social interests, is not a mere executive committee of the ruling
class. In itself, without class rule, it is a position of power
over the whole society that can dominate and exploit society.
Naturally enough, many fractions of the ruling classes and even the
oppressed classes strive to control the state, forming different
and ever-changing alliances. They also reject the need for a state
to serve the collective needs of the people. Hence, they reject not
only the current state, but the Marxian idea of the
dictatorship of the proletariat). Instead, they see the state
as an inherently oppressive force which takes away the ability of
people to make decisions about the things that affect their
lives.
Left-wing anarchists (such as Bakunin and
Kropotkin
in the 19th century), argue for a form of socialism without the
state. Such socialism would require worker self-management of the
means of production and the federation of worker organizations in
communes which will then federate into larger units.
Institutionalism
Both the Marxist and pluralist approaches view
the state as reacting to the activities of groups within society,
such as classes or interest groups. In this sense, they have both
come under criticism for their 'society-centered' understanding of
the state by scholars who emphasize the autonomy of the state with
respect to social forces.
In particular, the "new
institutionalism," an approach to politics that holds that
behavior is fundamentally molded by the institutions in which it is
embedded, asserts that the state is not an 'instrument' or an
'arena' and does not 'function' in the interests of a single class.
Scholars working within this approach stress the importance of
interposing civil society between the economy and the state to
explain variation in state forms.
"New institutionalist" writings on the state,
such as the works of Theda
Skocpol, suggest that state actors are to an important degree
autonomous. In other words, state personnel have interests of their
own, which they can and do pursue independently (at times in
conflict with) actors in society. Since the state controls the
means of coercion, and given the dependence of many groups in civil
society on the state for achieving any goals they may espouse,
state personnel can to some extent impose their own preferences on
civil society.
'New institutionalist' writers, claiming
allegiance to Weber, often utilize the distinction between 'strong
states' and 'weak states,' claiming that the degree of 'relative
autonomy' of the state from pressures in society determines the
power of the state—a position that has found favor in the field of
international political economy.
The state in modern political thought
The rise of the modern state system was closely related to changes in political thought, especially concerning the changing understanding of legitimate state power. Early modern defenders of absolutism such as Thomas Hobbes and Jean Bodin undermined the doctrine of the divine right of kings by arguing that the power of kings should be justified by reference to the people. Hobbes in particular went further and argued that political power should be justified with reference to the individual, not just to the people understood collectively. Both Hobbes and Bodin thought they were defending the power of kings, not advocating democracy, but their arguments about the nature of sovereignty were fiercely resisted by more traditional defenders of the power of kings, like Sir Robert Filmer in England, who thought that such defenses ultimately opened the way to more democratic claims.These and other early thinkers introduced two
important concepts in order to justify sovereign power: the idea of
a state of
nature and the idea of a social
contract. The first concept describes an imagined situation in
which the state - understood as a centralized, coercive power -
does not exist, and human beings have all their natural rights and
powers; the second describes the conditions under which a voluntary
agreement could take human beings out of the state of nature and
into a state of civil society. Depending on what they understood
human
nature to be and the natural
rights they thought human beings had in that state, various
writers were able to justify more or less extensive forms of the
state as a remedy for the problems of the state of nature. Thus,
for example, Hobbes, who described the state of nature as a "war of
every man, against every man," argued that sovereign power should
be almost absolute since almost all sovereign power would be better
than such a war, whereas John Locke,
who understood the state of nature in more positive terms, thought
that state power should be strictly limited. Both of them
nevertheless understood the powers of the state to be limited by
what rational individuals would agree to in a hypothetical or
actual social
contract.
The idea of the social contract lent itself to
more democratic interpretations than Hobbes or Locke would have
wanted. Jean-Jacques
Rousseau, for example, argued that the only valid social
contract would be one were individuals would be subject to laws
that only themselves had made and assented to, as in a small
direct
democracy. Today the tradition of social contract reasoning is
alive in the work of John Rawls and
his intellectual heirs, though in a very abstract form. Rawls
argued that rational individuals would only agree to social
institutions specifying a set of inviolable basic liberties and a
certain amount of redistribution to alleviate inequalities for the
benefit of the worst off. Lockean state of nature reasoning, by
contrast, is more common in the libertarian tradition of
political thought represented by the work of Robert
Nozick. Nozick argued that given the natural rights that human
beings would have in a state of nature, the only state that could
be justified would be a minimal
state whose sole functions would be to provide protection and
enforce agreements.
Some contemporary thinkers, such as Michel
Foucault, have argued that political theory needs to get away
from the notion of the state: "We need to cut off the king's head.
In political theory that has still to be done." By this he meant
that power in the modern world is much more decentralized and uses
different instruments than power in the early modern era, so that
the notion of a sovereign, centralized state is increasingly out of
date.
See also
- Country
- Elite theory
- Failed state
- International relations
- List of countries by date of nationhood
- List of sovereign states
- Montevideo Convention
- Nation
- Police state
- Political power
- Regional state
- Social contract
- State country
- Statism
- The justification of the state
- The purpose of government
- U.S. state
- Unitary state
- Province
References
states in Tosk Albanian: Staat
states in Aragonese: País
states in Official Aramaic (700-300 BCE):
ܐܬܪܐ
states in Asturian: País
states in Bengali: রাষ্ট্র
states in Min Nan: Kok-ka
states in Banyumasan: Negara
states in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Дзяржава
states in Bosnian: Država
states in Breton: Stad
states in Bulgarian: Държава
states in Catalan: Estat
states in Chuvash: Патшалăх
states in Czech: Stát
states in Welsh: Gwladwriaeth
states in Danish: Stat
states in German: Staat
states in Estonian: Riik
states in Modern Greek (1453-): Κράτος
states in Spanish: Estado
states in Esperanto: Ŝtato
states in Basque: Estatu
states in Persian: ایالت
states in French: État
states in Western Frisian: Steat
states in Fulah: Leydi
states in Irish: Tír
states in Galician: Estado
states in Classical Chinese: 國
states in Korean: 국가 (정치학)
states in Croatian: Država
states in Ido: Stato
states in Iloko: Pagilian
states in Indonesian: Negara
states in Icelandic: Ríki
states in Italian: Stato
states in Hebrew: מדינה
states in Kannada: ದೇಶ
states in Georgian: ქვეყანა
states in Kashubian: Państwò
states in Kazakh: Мемлекет
states in Haitian: Peyi
states in Latvian: Valsts
states in Lithuanian: Valstybė
states in Hungarian: Állam
states in Maltese: Pajjiżi
states in Maori: Rārangi whenua
states in Malay (macrolanguage): Negara
(politik)
states in Mongolian: Улс
states in Dutch: Staat
states in Dutch Low Saxon: Staot
states in Japanese: 州
states in Norwegian: Stat
states in Norwegian Nynorsk: Stat
states in Narom: État
states in Central Khmer: ប្រទេស
states in Polish: Państwo
states in Portuguese: Estado
states in Romanian: Stat
states in Vlax Romani: Stato
states in Quechua: Mama llaqta
states in Russian: Государство
states in Scots: Kintra
states in Sicilian: Statu
states in Simple English: State
states in Slovak: Štát
states in Slovenian: Država
states in Serbian: Држава
states in Serbo-Croatian: Država
states in Finnish: Valtio
states in Swedish: Stat
states in Tagalog: Estado
states in Thai: รัฐ
states in Vietnamese: Quốc gia
states in Tok Pisin: Kantri
states in Turkish: Devlet
states in Ukrainian: Держава
states in Urdu: ملک
states in Venetian: Stato
states in Võro: Riik
states in Wolof: Réew
states in Yiddish: שטאט
states in Contenese: 國
states in Chinese: 州