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The state, nations and nationalism summary

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This document summarises chapter 3 (The State) and 5 (Nations and NAtionalism) of politics:4th edition by Andrew Heywood

Institution
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Summarized whole book?
No
Which chapters are summarized?
Chapter 3 and 5
Uploaded on
September 10, 2021
Number of pages
15
Written in
2017/2018
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Summary

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The State


Defining the State

State- Political association that establishes sovereign jurisdiction within defined
territorial borders, and exercises authority through a set of permanent institutions

Institutions are seen as ‘public’

 Responsible for collective organisation of communal life
 Funded at public’s expense

Differences between State and Government

State Government
State is more extensive Government forms part of the state
State is continuing, permanent Government is temporary, it comes and
goes
State is where government policies are Government is the ‘brains’ of state
operationalised
State exercises impersonal power Government is dominated by political
party/parties
State represents permanent interests of Government represents partisan
society sympathies of ruling party



The state has been understood in four ways:

1. Idealist Perspective

Social existence consist of family, civil society and the state

Drawback:




1

,  Fails to distinguish between institutions inside the state and outside the
state
2. Functionalist Perspective

Function of the state: to maintain social order; state therefore consists of institutions that
uphold order and deliver social stability

Drawback:

 Tends to associate any institution that maintains order with the state
(family, media, etc.)


3. Organisational Perspective

Defined state as the apparatus of government –all institutions that are ‘public’

 Responsible for collective organisation of social existence; funded at
public’s expense
 Thus clear distinction between state (institutions: military, police, courts,
etc.) and civil society (the people)
 ‘Rolling forward’ and ‘rolling back’ of the state

Key features of the state:

 State is sovereign
 State is public
 State is legitimate
 State is an instrument of domination
 State is a territorial association


4. International Perspective

Views the state as an actor on the world state (the basic ‘unit’ in international politics)

 Thus state has dualistic character: inward vs. outward



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