|
|||||
International
Relations-PSC 201
VU
LESSON
05
THE
NATION STATE SYSTEM: BASIC
FEATURES OF A NATION-STATE
(Continued
from Lecture 4)
Sovereignty
The
concept of sovereignty is permanently
associated with a nation-state. It
evolved in the 16thc
in France,
during
the conflict between the state
and the church.
Many
theorists have defined sovereignty.
Hobbes focused on its
absolutist aspect, while
Austin focused on
legalistic
or juristic notions of sovereignty. The modern
doctrine of popular sovereignty
has transferred the
source
of absolute power from the monarch to the
people.
The
notion of sovereignty is important
but it can become rigid
unless applied to the evolving pattern
of
inter-state
relations.
Nationalism
Nationalism
implies elevation of the nation above
all other values. States
usually control the mass
media to
propagate
their foreign policy
objectives and centralize
their education systems to popularize
nationalistic
values.
Nationalism
may take precedence over
moral and religious beliefs (Soviet
Union) or it may become
fused
with
such beliefs (Israel). Hans
Morgenthau differentiated between
nationalism of the 19th century and more
recent
nationalistic universalism under which
one state can claim the
right to impose its own
standards
upon
the actions of all other
nations.
Nationalism
is an ideology that creates
and sustains a nation as a
concept of a common identity for
groups
of
humans. According to the theory of
nationalism, the good being, the preservation of
identity features, the
independence
in all subjects, and the
glory, of one's own nation,
are fundamental values.
Nationalists
base nations on various notions of
political legitimacy. These can derive
from the liberal
argument
that political legitimacy is derived
from the consent of a region's
population, or combinations of
the
two.
The
modern vernacular use of nationalism
refers to the political (and
military) exercise of ethnic
and
religious
nationalism, as defined below. Political
scientists usually tend to
research and focus on the
more
extreme
forms of nationalism usually related with
national-socialism, separatism
etc.
National
Power
Power
is a gauged by both tangible and
non-tangible aspects. The
economic output, size,
population and
military
strength of a state are tangible
and quantifiable
aspects.
Power
also rests on intangible
factors like quality of
leadership, ideology, morale
and manipulative or
diplomatic
strength. Power purchases
security and enables survival of a
state, thus it is an end
onto itself.
This
long run objective to achieve power
also requires exertion of
power, so it is also a means to an
end.
Ingredients
of National Power
Force:
the
explicit threat or use of military,
economic, nuclear and other
instruments of coercion by one
state
against
another.
Influence:
using instruments of persuasion by
one state to alter or maintain the behavior of another
state.
Authority:
voluntary compliance with
directives of a state by other
states out of respect,
solidarity, or in
recognition
of expertise.
Relevant
Vocabulary
Derived:
obtained
or extracted from
Legitimacy:
legality or
justification
International
Relations-PSC 201
VU
Compliance:
following
and/or accepting instructions
Directives:
orders
Solidarity:
united
stance
Explicit:
obvious or visible
Intangible: not
visible or very evident
Gauged:
ascertained or measured
Suggested
Readings
Students
are advised to read the
following chapters to develop a better understanding
of the various
principals
highlighted in this hand-out:
Chapter
2 in `"A Study of International
Relations" by Dr. Sultan
Khan.
Internet
Resources
In
addition to reading from the
textbook, please visit the
following web-pages for this
lecture, which
provide
useful and interesting
information:
Nationalism
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nationalism
Table of Contents:
|
|||||