SOVEREIGNTY

supreme authority in a political community. The concept of sovereignty has had a long history of development, and it may be said that every political theorist since Plato has dealt with the notion in some manner, although not always explicitly. Jean Bodin was the first theorist to formulate a modern concept of sovereignty. In his Six Bookes of a Commonweale (1576) Bodin asserted that the prince, or the sovereign, has the power to declare law. Thomas Hobbes later furthered the concept of kingly sovereignty by stating that the king not only declares law but creates it; he thereby gave the sovereign both absolute moral and political power. Hobbes, like other social-contract theorists, asserted that the king derives his power from a populace who have collectively given up their own former personal sovereignty and power and placed it irretrievably in the king.

The concept of sovereignty was closely related to the growth of the modern nation-state, and today the term is used almost exclusively to describe the attributes of a state rather than a person. A sovereign state is often described as one that is free and independent. In its internal affairs it has undivided jurisdiction over all persons and property within its territory. It claims the right to regulate its economic life without regard for its neighbors and to increase armaments without limit. No other nation may rightfully interfere in its domestic affairs. In its external relations it claims the right to enforce its own conception of rights and to declare war.

This description of a sovereign state is denied, however, by those who assert that international law is binding. Because states are limited by treaties and international obligations and are not legally permitted by the United Nations Charter to commit aggression at will, they argue that the absolute freedom of a sovereign state is, and should be, a thing of the past. In current international practice this view is generally accepted. The United Nations is today considered the principal organ for restraining the exercise of sovereignty.

In the United States, the nation (i.e. the federal government) and each state are considered sovereign. Among conflicts in which the concept comes into play are those between the federal and state governments (see states' rights) and those between citizens and either the federal or a state government. Governments are generally held to be immune from suit for consequences of their sovereign acts (those acts the government was constituted or empowered to perform). This "sovereign immunity" must be waived to permit suit against the government. It is also encountered in claims that government officials, in pursuance of their duties, be immune from having to give evidence before a tribunal or inquiry.

See C. E. Merriam, History of the Theory of Sovereignty since Rousseau (1900, repr. 1968); H. J. Laski, Studies in the Problem of Sovereignty (1917, repr. 1968); B. de Jouvenel, Sovereignty (tr. 1957); J. L. Brierly, The Law of Nations (6th ed. 1963); F. H. Hinsley, Sovereignty (1966); A. James, Sovereign Statehood (1986).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Sovereignty  - 30516 results

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...affect the behavior of actors. 10 Westphalian sovereignty and international legal sovereignty exclusively refer to issues of authority...international agreements? Interdependence sovereignty exclusively refers to control: can a state...
...Abraham D., xiii , 5 , 110 , 208 , 324 ; Sovereignty: The Practitioner's Perspective coauthor...Korea, 148 , 159 , 163 64, 169 , 173 sovereignty: and authority, 58 59; as bad word...63 72. See also Asian historical sovereignty; domestic sovereignty; interdependence...
to the issue of sovereignty. Given the ambiguity of the content of sovereignty, some students have tended to leave the notion of sovereignty undefined. Jens Bartelsons Genealogy of Sovereignty is one such example. However, it is doubtful whether...
...how to deal with the terms state and sovereignty. Different analysts define state in...chapter. Similarly, the concept of sovereignty has become increasingly contested in...suggesting that the meaning given to sovereignty is continually evolving Biersteker and...
1 Sovereignty in International Society The institution of sovereignty is central to understanding the norma- tive framework...community compromises one of the fundamental aspects of sovereignty, the norm of self-determination.? However...
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journal articles on: Sovereignty  - 12772 results

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Relational sovereignty. by Helen Stacy INTRODUCTION I. HISTORICAL MODELS OF SOVEREIGNTY--AND THEIR LIMITATIONS A. Historical Models as Metaphors 1. Hobbesian sovereignty 2. Lockean sovereignty B. The Metaphor Breaks Down: International...
Sovereignty Migrates in U.S. and Mexican Law...Mexico and the United States exercise sovereignty that is increasingly transnational and...two doctrines rooted in international sovereignty. Both have historically defined sovereign...
...The relationship between "permanent sovereignty" and the obligation not to cause transboundary...I. Introduction 1188 II. Permanent Sovereignty over Natural Resources 1190 A. Conception...1190 B. The Principle of Permanent Sovereignty over Natural Resources 1191 C. Resolution...
...Jackson, Quasi-states: Sovereignty, International Relations...R. B. J. Walker, "Sovereignty, Identity and Community...Practice", in Contending Sovereignties: Redefining Political Community...United Nations and State Sovereignty: Mechanism for Managing...
...of unfettered ruler sovereignty found in his text...religion-centered sovereignties overlapping with ecological...around the question of sovereignty outside Europe. Sovereignty...anachronism of finding new sovereignties in old clothes as...wishful error that sovereignty was indivisible...
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Sovereignty Now! in the Midst of Economic and Environmental Crises...led model of agriculture and that the time for "food sovereignty" has come. ILLUSTRATION OMITTED Food sovereignty, as a framework, evolved from the experience of farmers...
The War on Sovereignty: When the New World Order Architects...on Foreign Relations Prattle about Sovereignty, They Mean Something Entirely Different...mysterious political force called sovereignty out of the clutches of the local national...
...organize political life. Sovereignty Means Final Authority Not...elaborated the notion of sovereignty in the 16th and 17th centuries...and balances and multiple sovereignties distributed among local and...antithetical to the idea that sovereignty means uncontrolled domestic...
Has Sovereignty-Sharing a Future in International...Leviathan or artificial man, whose soul is sovereignty, whose reason is law, whose strength...1) is that the partial sharing of sovereignty comes closest to combining a respect...
Sovereignty as Duty to Protect Human Rights. by...law--an old one, respect for state sovereignty, and a more recent one, respect for...article supports a modern concept of sovereignty that involves a duty to protect human...
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Iraq Sovereignty and the Rule of Law; Transfer of Power...of whether the June 30 transfer of sovereignty to an interim Iraqi authority should...perhaps, too soon? Doesnt handing over sovereignty in a deteriorating security environment...
Territorial Sovereignty. Byline: THE WASHINGTON TIMES President...loving, and democratic country; its sovereignty rests in its 23 million people...not independent. It does not enjoy sovereignty as a nation," he obviously was not...
Sovereignty Gains . . . and Losses. Byline: Thomas P. Kilgannon...billions of U.S. tax dollars spent to give Iraq its sovereignty. But while Americans have been fighting for Iraqi sovereignty, we have allowed the United Nations to strip us...
Sovereignty lite by Diana West This is a story about Kofi Annan, Strobe Talbott, sovereignty and Mary Poppins. When the U.N. secretary...rights must forever trump "concerns of state sovereignty," he was, as he noted, simply endorsing...
Eroding Sovereignty. Byline: Frank Gaffney Jr., THE WASHINGTON TIMES A likely...significant, and possibly irreversible, erosion in the nations sovereignty. Sovereignty is an abstraction to which few Americans give much thought...
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encyclopedia articles on: Sovereignty  - 226 results

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SOVEREIGNTY supreme authority in a political community. The concept of sovereignty has had a long history of development, and...first theorist to formulate a modern concept of sovereignty. In his Six Bookes of a Commonweale (1576...
POPULAR SOVEREIGNTY in U.S. history, doctrine under...Nebraska Act . Douglas called it "popular sovereignty," but proslavery Southerners, who...contemptuously called it "squatter sovereignty...
SQUATTER SOVEREIGNTY see popular sovereignty . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...essence of Douglass doctrine of popular sovereignty (a phrase he coined later, in 1854), or Squatter Sovereignty, as its opponents contemptuously called...1854. Douglas believed that popular sovereignty would unite the northern and southern...
...ceremonial functions as the head of state. Sovereignty rests in Parliament, which consists...The Bill of Rights confirmed that sovereignty resided in Parliament. The Act of Toleration...reign, George III was insane, and sovereignty was exercised by the future George IV...
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