Reconstructing Sovereignty

Springer Verlag (2019)
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Abstract

The notion of sovereignty plays an important part in various areas of law, such as constitutional law and international public law. Though the concept of sovereignty as applied in constitutional law differs from that used in international public law, there is no true consensus on the meaning of “sovereignty” within these respective fields, either. Is sovereignty about factual power, or only about legal equality? Do only democracies have sovereignty, because they have legitimacy, or is there no connection between democracy, legitimacy and sovereignty? Has the European Union encroached upon the sovereignty of the Member States, or is transferring competences to the European Union an expression and exercise of the very sovereignty some claim is under attack? Is it about states, or is it about peoples having a right to self-determination, and if the latter, does this represent popular sovereignty or something else? In order to answer these and related questions, we need a clear grasp of what “sovereignty” means. This book provides an analytical and conceptual framework for “sovereignty” in the context of law. The book does not seek to describe how the term “sovereignty” is used in the different contexts and discourses in which it is employed, but rather distinguishes between two possible meanings of sovereignty that allow the reader to use the term with specificity and clarity. In this way, this book hopes to offer valuable analytical tools for politicians, constitutional and international lawyers and legal theorists that help them be clear about what they mean when they speak of “sovereignty.”

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Chapters

Conclusion

In this book, I have explicated or reconstructed the concept of sovereignty by developing two conceptions of it: constitutive and constituted sovereignty. I have applied these conceptions to different questions of our time, from secession to the European Union, and compared and contrasted my concept... see more

Other Accounts

In this chapter, various accounts of sovereignty are described and analysed, using both Hohfeldian terminology and the framework developed in the previous section to elucidate and clarify the existing discourse on sovereignty. The accounts of sovereignty analysed here are grouped together by the ent... see more

Sovereignty in Context

I have developed the two conceptions of sovereignty. In this chapter, I apply the conceptions of constitutive and constituted sovereignty to current questions and issues that involve the notion of sovereignty. My aim in doing so is to show that the insights developed in the previous chapters of the ... see more

Questions About Sovereignty

There are many points regarding sovereignty on which there is disagreement. A conception of sovereignty needs to be clear on at least the following points: first, the holder of sovereignty; second, the meaning of sovereignty; third, its character of being absolute or limited, including the possibili... see more

Sovereignty Outside of the Law

Popular sovereignty is often said to mean that state power emanates from the people. Given this, one might ask how it is possible that state power emanates from the people, and what is meant by state power in this context. This starting point implies that sovereignty is not a legitimizing notion or ... see more

Sovereignty in the Law

This chapter considers sovereignty as a legal concept. It deals first with the question of how to determine what legal concepts mean. This is followed by an inferential analysis of sovereignty in international law and an inferential analysis of sovereignty in national law. I develop, here, a concept... see more

Preliminaries

Imagine that a Member of Parliament of the British House of Commons, a Chinese delegate to the United Nations and an Indian citizen walk into a bar. Before pouring them their drinks, the bartender asks each of them who is sovereign. The British MP replies that it is, of course, Westminster Parliamen... see more

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