What is the state , State is a nation or territory considered as an organized political community under one government. State is is the organization while the government is the particular group of people, the administrative bureaucracy that controls the state apparatus at a given time.
The Term “State.”
Political science, as we have seen, deals With the phenomena of that highest of all human associations, the state. The term employed by the Greeks which corresponds mast nearly to the modern English term “state” was polis, meaning “city.” For them, the term was appropriate enough because their states were city-states, not territorial or country states such as most of those of modern times are.
In short, as Seeley remarked, political science was for the Greeks largely municipal science. The Romans employed the term civitas which connoted the same idea But they also employed the phrases status rei publicae and res publica, which implied not merely the idea of citizenship of a city but the notion of the public welfare. The terms probably conveyed to the Roman mind of the fifth century after Christ a meaning very similar to our modern nation of a state.
The early Teutons adopted only a part of the phrase status from which the modern word “state” was derived. In early modern times the coming into use of such German words as Landtag, Landesgesetz and Landesstaatsrecht indicated the new ct2nception2 of the state as a territorial rather than an urban commonwealth.
The word “state” (stato) appears to have been introduced into the modern literature of political science by Machiavelli, who in his famous book, “The Prince” ( Principe, 1523) observed at the outset that all the powers which have had and have authority over men are states (stati) and are either monarchies or republics.
In the course of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the words state, states, Staat appeared in English, French, and German literature, although Bodin in 1576 preferred the term “republic” o(republique) as the title of the French edition of his famous treatise.
Various Uses of the Term :-
Etymologically the term is an abstract one which has reference to that which is fixed or established. Thus we speak of the “state” of a man health, of his mind, or of his economic condition. The etymological connotation does not therefore correspond to the meaning of the word as a term of political science. Unfortunately, like many other words of common usage in the literature of political science and law, it is used in various senses Thus it is often employed as a synonym of nation, society, country, government etc.
It is commonly employed also to express the idea of the collective action of society as distinguished from individual action as when we speak of “state” aid to education, “state” regulation of industry, etc. Again, in some countries having the federal system of government, such as the United States (and the German Empire of 187 l1918), the term is used to designate both the federation as a whole and the component members constituting it.
The effect of this dual use of the term is to introduce confusion into the terminology of political science and it sometimes leads to misconceptions in political thinking. It is regrettable that neither the English, nor the German, nor the French language contains a suitable term by which the component members of federal unions may be appropriately designated. They are not, strictly speaking, “states” nor yet are they mere provinces or administrative districts, at least not in the American, Canadian, or Australian federal unions.
Likewise the use of the terms state and government as if the two things were identical, has produced equal confession and often misunderstanding. In fact they represent widely different concepts and upon the recognition of the distinction between them depends the true understanding of some of the most fundamental questions of political science.
The state is the politically organized person or entity for the promotion of common ends and the satisfaction of common needs, while the government is the collective name for the agency, magistracy, or organization through which the will of the state is formulated, expressed, and realized. The government is an essential organ or agency of the state, but it is no more the state itself than the board of directors of a corporation is itself the corporation.
In earlier times, it was not uncommon to identify the ruling sovereign with the state, and the famous saying attributed to Louis XIV (Lfétat, c’est moi) has often been quoted as an example of such identification But if the government and state were identical, the death of the reigning, sovereign or the overthrow of the government would necessarily interrupt, if not destroy, the continuity of the state life.
As a matter of fact changes of governmental organization do not affect the existence of the state. States possess the quality of permanence. Governments, on the contrary, are not immortal, they are constantly undergoing change as a result of revolution, or through legal processes, yet the state continues unimpaired and unaffected.
Governments are mere contrivances to use the language of Professor Seeley, through which the state manifests itself. They possess no sovereignty, no original unlimited authority, but only derivative power delegated by the state through its constitution. To understand clearly, therefore, the nature of each and the relation of one to the other, we must avoid identifying them either in thought or in treatment.
The term “state” is also frequently employed as a synonym for “society.” Thus is it said that society has a right to protect itself against crime, when it is the state that is meant. Society is the more general term meaning the people, viewed in their associated aspect, that is, an aggregation having common interests and united by what the sociologists term a consciousness of kind, whereas the state is a particular portion of society politically organized for the protection and promotion of its common interests. The principal difference between society and the state, therefore, is that the latter necessarily implies political organization, while the former does not. Spencer described the state as society in its corporate capacity.
What Is The State ?
From a consideration of matters of terminology we come now to inquire what is the state. Definitions of the state are, as the German writer Schulze remarked, innumerable, almost every author-having his own and scarcely any two being alike. Aristotle, the “father of political science” defined the state as
“a union of families and villages having for its end a perfect and self-sufficing life, by which we mean a happy and honorable life.”
If, he said,
“all communities aim at some good, the state or political community, which is the highest of all and which embraces all the rest, aims, and in a greater degree than any other, at the highest good.”
As a general statement of the primary object of the state it can hardly be improved upon. Cicero defined the state (respublzca) as a numerous society united by a common sense of right and a mutual participation in advantages.
His definition commended itself to Grotius, who defined the state somewhat similarly as a perfect society of free men united for the sake of enjoying the advantages of right and the common utility, is and his definition in turn was adapted in substance by Vattel and Wheaton. Bodin, in 1576, defined the state as an association of families and their common possessions, governed by a supreme power and by reason. Thus, like Aristotle, he made the family rather than the individual the unit.
Modern Definitions of the State :-
Among the definitions given by modern authorities the following are among the most satisfactory. The English writer Holland defines a state as a numerous assemblage of human beings, generally occupying a certain territory, among whom the will of the majority or of an ascertainable class of persons is by the strength of such a majority or class made to prevail against any of their number who oppose it.
Hall, viewing the state primarily as a concept of international law,says, The marks of an independent state are that the community constituting it is permanently established for a political end, that it possesses a defined territory, and that it is independent of external control .
Burgess defines it as a particular portion of mankind ,viewed as an organized unit, which is substantially the same as the definition given by Bluntschli, who says, The state is the politically organized people of a definite territory. The United States Supreme Court in an early case defined a state as a body of free persons united together for the common benefit, to enjoy peaceably what is their own, and to do justice to others.
More recently it has defined the state as a political community of free citizens occupying a territory of defined boundaries, and organized under a government sanctioned and limited by a written constitution and established by the consent of the governed. Esmein, regarding it from the point of view of the jurist, defines the state s the juridical personification of a nation. Duguit defines it uniquely as a human society in which there exists a political differentiation, that is, a differentiation between the governed and the governors.
Carre de Malberg defines the state concretely as a community of men fixed on a territory which is their own and possessing an organization from which results, for the group envisaged in its relations with its members, a superior Power of action, of command, and of coercion.
Phillimore says a state for all purposes of international law is a people permanently occupying a fixed territory, bound together by common laws, habits, and customs into one body politic, exercising through the medium of an organized government: independent sovereignty and control over all persons and things within its boundaries, capable of making war and peace and of entering into all international relations with the communities of the globe.
Conclusion :-
If one more definition may be added to this long list I would say that the state, as a concept of political science and public law, is a community of persons more or less numerous permanently occupying a definite portion of territory, in dependent, or nearly so, of external control, and possessing an organized government to which the great body of inhabitants render habitual obedience. The essential constituent elements, political, physical, and spiritual, of the modern state are all brought out in this definition.
They are first, a group of persons associated together for common purposes second, the occupation of a determinate portion of the earth’s surface which constitutes the home (or, as the Germans say, the Baden) of the population, third, independence of foreign control and fourth, a common supreme authority or agency through which the collective will is expressed and enforced.
Factors Determining Definitions :-
Points of View Naturally definitions of the state are colored by the opinions of their authors and are affected by the point of view from which the state is envisaged. Thus the sociologist, viewing it primarily as a social phenomenon, usually defines it differently from the way in which the jurist, who regards it first of all as a juridical establishment, ‘usually defines it. Similarly, writers on international law in their definitions emphasize certain elements-Which the political scientist ignores or minimizes. Finally, philosophical writers who think and write in abstract terms formulate their definitions accordingly. Such, for example, were the definitions of Hegel, Who defined the state as the incorporation of the objective spirit as the ethical spirit, the manifest, self-conscious, substantial will of man, thinking and knowing itself and suiting its performance to its knowledge or to the proportion of its knowledge as the actualization of concrete freedom, as perfected rationality the realization of the moral idea, etc.
The objection to such definitions is that they are, aside from their highly abstract character, based on a one-sided view of the state and afford little clue to its real character and mission. In attempting to define the state we Should do well to remember that it is at the same time both an abstract conception and a concrete organization. Abstractly considered, it is merely a juridical person, a corporation, separate and distinct from the people who, with the territory which they occupy, constitute the physical state.
On the other hand, the state concretely considered is the community, the territory which it occupies, and the organization through which it wills and acts. Thus viewed, the state is identified with the physical elements which are said to constitute it. Some writers conceive it only from the first viewpoint others, denying the personality theory, regard it only from the second point of view.
The Idea and the Concept of the State :-
Political Philosophers have often discussed the idea and some have distinguished it from the concept of the state. The term idea as thus used connotes several meanings. Thus the state, when considered apart from its concrete physical existence, is sometimes referred to as an abstract idea. Again it is spoken of as existing in idea before it has acquired an objective form with an organization and institutions.
Thus Hegel said the idea of the state has immediate actuality in the individual state, by which he apparently meant that it is merely a thing of philosophical speculation until it takes Hesh and blood and becomes a working institution serving the needs of the community. Other writers, for the most part Germans, distinguishing between the idea (Idee) and the concept (Begrig) of the state, employ the term Stateside to designate the ideally perfect state as distinguished from the imperfect actual state, that is, the state as a concept.
Some of them appear to regard the ideally perfect state as a universal state. Thus Biuntschli said,
“the concept of the state (Staatsbegiff) has to do with the natural and essential characteristics of actual states. The idea of the state (Staatszdee) presents a picture, in the splendor of imaginary perfection, of the state as not yet realized but to be striven for.”
Burgess adopts this distinction between the idea and the concept of the state.
He says:
“The idea of the state is the state perfect and complete. The concept of the state is the state developing and approaching perfection. From the standpoint of the idea, the state is mankind viewed as an organized unit”
From the standpoint of the concept, it is a particular portion of mankind viewed as an organized unit. From the stand-point of the idea the territorial basis of the state is the world, and the principle of unity is humanity. From the standpoint of the concept, again, the territorial basis of the state is a particular portion of the earth’s surface, and the principle of unity is that particular phase of human nature and of human need, which at any particular stage in the development of that nature is predominant and commanding. The former is the real state of the perfect future. The latter is the real state of the past, the present, and the imperfect future. The distinction is largely met a physical or philosophical and has little practical value. The view that the ideal state state, will, of course, find numerous combatants.
The State as a Concept of International Law :-
The state as to often defined by writers on political science and constitutional law is not necessarily a state in the sense in which the term is used in the literature of international law. Conversely, a state in the latter sense may lack some of the attributes of a state as a Concept of Political science and constitutional law.
Thus writers who do not consider sovereignty as an essential constituent element of the state regard members of federal unions, protect Orates, so-called vassal states under the suzerainty of other states, states under mandates, and autonomous dependencies like the British self governing dominions, as states, although they are not fully such in the eye of international law. Likewise, there is a group of petty states such as San Marino and Liechtenstein which although sovereign and possessing the other marks of a state when judged by the criteria of political science, are not regarded as full international persons.
A state in the sense of international law must be a fully sovereign and independent community with a legal capacity to enter into international relations, and must possess the power and will to fulfill the obligations which international law requires of all members of the family of nations.
Furthermore, it must have been recognized as such and thereby admitted to membership in the international community on a footing of , equality with other states. A community therefore may possess all the marks of a state as usually defined in terms of political science, but until it has been received into the family of nations it is not a state according to international law. International law does not deny the existence of a state before it has been recognized, but it simply takes no notice of it.
Thus the Ottoman Empire was not admitted to participate in the benefits of the European system of public law until 1856, while China and Japan were not recognized as full members of the international community until a still more recent date. Although Russia has long been a member, there is at present a disposition to treat her as being outside the circle because of the refusal of the Soviet government to recognize the validity of the international engagements and obligations entered into by the former governments of Russia.
Is the League of Nations :-
State ? The recent establishment of a new international political entity known as the League of Nations has given rise to much discussion as to its exact juristic character. Some of its friends have maintained that it is a state, at least in the sense of international law, that is an international person, while some of its critics have attacked it on the ground that it is a super-state elected over the individual states which compose its membership. It is a creation having executive, administrative, and quasi-legislative organs it has brought about the establishment of a court which may be regarded, in a sense at least, as the judicial organ of the League it has a seat or capital, a treasury, a budget, it owns buildings and other property it can probably sue in the courts and be sued, at least with its consent it is said to have the right of legation, since in fact several members of the League have accredited permanent quasi-diplomatic representatives to it and occasionally it sends temporary missions to other states , its representatives and officials. by article of the covenant are declared to be entitled to diplomatic privileges and immunizes when engaged on the business of the League, it is said to exercise the right of sovereignty, for example, over the Saar basin and the territories under mandate, it exercises the power of intervention for the protection of minorities in certain states, it exercises the power to declare war and make peace etc.
The League Not a State :-
On the other hand, it is argued that the League cannot be properly regarded as an international person, or state, for the reason that it has no territory of its own over which it can exercise jurisdiction, no power to issue commands and enforce obedience, and if it had, it possesses no subjects to whom it could address such commands. As to the right of legation attributed to it, it has been pointed out that it is at best only a very imperfect right, since the League has no legal capacity to accord diplomatic privileges to persons accredited to it,-nor to protect those to whom it is promised, nor any power to refuse to receive a particular person because he is persona non gram Or for other reasons, Its right to declare war is nothing more than the right of the council to recommend to the members military action and if in their discretion they act upon the recommendation the war is-carried on not by the League but by the participating members.
Its alleged right of sovereignty over the Saar basin is not such in strict legal theory but merely the right of provisional government and trusteeship the dejure sovereignty remaining in the German state. The situation is essentially the same in respect to the mandated territories, the sovereignty over them belonging either to the mandatory power or to the mandated state. In either case the role of the League is merely that of supervisionthe duty to see, so far as it can, that the mandatory power exercises its control in accordance with the terms of the mandate and for the benefit of the inhabitants.
As to the right of intervention in behalf of racial, linguistic or religious minorities, that is nothing more than the right to use good offices and moral influence or to recommend military action by the members of the League. Finally, the alleged League protectorate over Danzig is not such in fact, and it is pointed out that the control of the foreign relations of the free city has been entrusted to Poland, Who exercises it not on behalf of the League or even of the free city, but in the interest of Poland itself
For these reasons it is denied that the League is an international person, that is, a state in the sense of international law. The better view is that the League is not a state, least of all a superstate, according to either political science or international law, but is rather an association of independent states and self governing dominions established for the accomplishment of Specific Objects.
As such it approximates a state, in the sense of international law, more nearly than any Other international association in existence. In the course of time it may possibly develop into an association possessing the attributes of a full-fledged international person, though it is difficult to see how it can ever evolve into a state, as the term is ordinarily defined in political science and constitutional law, without its involving the destruction, in part at least, of the individual member states composing it.
Is the Papacy a State ?
Prior to 1870 the Holy See was a state and the pope was a temporal sovereign, as well as the ecclesiastical head of the Roman Catholic Church. In that year, however the papal territories were secularized and incorporated in the new kingdom of Italy and thus the temporal sovereignty of the pope came to an end.
Nevertheless, certain Catholic writers maintained that the papacy was still a state, although they admitted that it lacked some of the characteristics of other states. They argued that although the papacy had lost its former territories it stile possessed the Vatican with its grounds , that in its officials employees, and guards it had subjects, that they were under the jurisdiction of the papacy alone , that the papacy had its own governmental organization and judicial court, that the pope was not subject to the king of Italy or any other temporal sovereign that he sent and received diplomatic representatives who were treated on an equal footing with other diplomatic representatives, that he entered into agreements (concordats) with other states, and that he was accorded (at least by Catholic powers) the honors of a temporal sovereign.
The better opinion, however, is that while the papacy was treated somewhat as if it were an international person, it was not such in fact and that it was still less a state according to political science. It was not invited to send plenipotentiaries to either of the two Hague Peace Conferences or to other international conferences later convoked. Moreover, the diplomatic representatives appointed by or accredited to the Vatican were charged only with interests of a religious character, and the concordats to which the papacy was a party dealt only with such matters.
All doubt as to whether the papacy was a state was removed, however, in 1929 by the conclusion of a treaty by which Italy recognized the sovereignty, ownership, and exclusive jurisdiction of the Holy See over the Vatican City, a small territory of 160 acres inhabited by about 400 persons. Italy also recognized the right of the Holy See to send and receive diplomatic representatives according to the general provisions of international law.
By an express declaration, however, the Holy See announced its intention of remaining aloof from all temporal disputes between nations and refraining from participation in international congresses convoked for the settlement of such disputes, except Upon special appeal from the contending parties.
A territory that has its institutions and population comprises a state. A nation can be seen at a much wider angle; it incorporates several such territories or states which are united by their history, culture and various other factors.
Law Quiz
Test your knowledge about topics related to law
1 / 10
___________ consists in the omission of that diligence which is required by the nature of the obligation.
Negligence
Delay
Mistake
None of the above
2 / 10
What is the term for a written agreement between two or more parties that is enforceable by law?
Contract
Tort
Statute
Regulation
3 / 10
What is the role of the police in law enforcement?
To maintain public order and enforce laws
To investigate crimes and arrest suspects
To prosecute individuals who have been charged with a crime
To enforce regulations and issue fines
4 / 10
What type of law governs the distribution of property upon a person’s death?
Contract Law
Tort Law
Criminal Law
Probate Law
5 / 10
The correct sequence in the formation of a contract is
Offer, acceptance, agreement, consideration
Agreement, consideration, offer,acceptance
Offer, consideration, acceptance, agreement
Offer, acceptance, consideration, agreement
6 / 10
In “Promissory note” and a “bill of exchange” how many parties involved?
Two parties to a “Promissory note three to a bill of exchange”
One party to a “Promissory note” two to a “bill of exchange”
Four parties to a “Promissory note” three to a “bill of exchange
Three parties to a “Promissory note” four to a “bill of exchange
7 / 10
What type of law deals with environmental protection and conservation?
Environmental Law
Contract Law
Criminal Law
Probate Law
8 / 10
What is a resolution in legal terms?
A formal expression of the opinion or will of an official body or assembly
A document that outlines the steps to be taken in response to a problem
A written agreement between two parties
A judgment or decision made by a court of law
9 / 10
What type of law involves disputes between private parties?
Contract Law
Tort Law
Criminal Law
Constitutional Law
10 / 10
What is the name of the organization established by the United Nations in 1945 to promote peace, security, and cooperation among nations?
World Trade Organization
International Criminal Court
United Nations
International Court of Justice
Nation is often used as an identity for most people whereas state is often referred to as a person’s home or a sense of belonging.
Key Takeaways
- A nation represents a group with a shared culture, history, and identity, while a state refers to a politically organized territory with a government.
- Nations can exist without a specific territory, whereas states require defined geographical boundaries.
- States exercise sovereignty and political authority, while nations emphasize cultural and historical connections among people.
A nation is a group of people who share a common identity, culture, language, history, and often a sense of shared destiny. A nation can exist without a state and may be dispersed across multiple states. A state is a political entity with a defined territory, a government, and the ability to exercise sovereignty over its territory and population. A state may be composed of one or more nations.
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A nation is seen as a community of people who were formed on varied factors such as a common language, ethnicity, culture, shared history, who come to represent the collective identity of people.
The word nation means ‘birth’ in Latin. People identify as a nation with their cultural community and shared territories
A state is under the governance system either with monopoly or by force. Stateless governments do exist such as the “Iroquois Confederacy.”
Under a federal union, all of these states are called the federated polities that constitute a federation. Only 5,500 years ago, states came into existence before people lived in a stateless society.
Comparison Table
Parameters of Comparison | Nation | State |
---|---|---|
Etymology | Nation originated from the word ‘nation in French which originates again from the Latin word ‘natio.’ | The word state is derived from the European languages. It is again derived from the Latin word ‘status’ |
Definition | A nation is described as a community of people who inhabit different territories but are united by common history | According to the Oxford Dictionary “a state is an organised political community under one government; a commonwealth; a nation.” |
Period of Origin | A nation came into existence by 1000 BC to 500 BC | A state came into existence and recognised was in the year 1787 |
First to Exist | Canada was the first nation to come into being. | ‘Delaware’ was the first state to exist in 1787. |
The Two Types | Civic nation and Ethic nation are the two types of nation. | The sovereign state and the federal state are the two types of states. |
What is a Nation?
A nation is a group of people or a larger number of people who share the same origin, language that they speak, traditions they follow and shared ethnicity.
‘Nacion’ in French means birth or the place of origin from which the word Nation was derived.
In Latin, the word ‘Natio’ means birth as well. The nation is also a community of people who share a defined territory and they are under an independent government or as a sovereign.
Many social scientists in the late 20th century argued that the nations were of two types which are a civic nation and an ethnic nation.
The civic nation was from the French Revolution with ideas developed from the 18th-century French philosophers where they called the nation a willingness to live together.
The ethnic nation concept is from the 19th-century German philosophers which say nation comprises people who have a common history.
The term Nation is also the shared belief that a people of a country are connected to each other with defined territories.
What is a State?
A state is where the people who have formed a community and exercise power within a particular territory. Several states together make a nation. The four categories of a state are the population it has, the defined territory, sovereignty and the government.
A state is also a political community that comes under a nation.
A state can be of two types: the sovereign state and the federal state.
A sovereign state has a defined territory with its government. It is not dependent on another power. It has its institutions and a stable population confined to a territory. It has the right to make treaties and agreements with any other state.
A federal-state comes under the federated policies of the federation. A state came into existence after the origin of the society.
It has a fixed territory, political organisation and the power to enforce laws. It has an organized economy with rules and protocols being set.
There are also other two categories of a state : democracy and dictatorship.
The functions of a state are to maintain law and order, maintain stability, when there are various kinds of disputes it has to solve it through a legal system, it has to provide common defense, has to maintain the welfare of the population such as maintaining a good public health measures and providing education
Main Differences Between Nation and State
- A nation has a large geographical area with people who have a common identity. The nation can be seen as an ethnic or cultural identity whereas the state can be seen as a geographical and political identity.
- Many states comprise together and it is called a nation and not many nations can be called a state.
- A state has defined territories with a government, sovereign or hegemony as a ruling power. A nation is defined by the shared culture and ethnicity of the population
- A nation came into existence in 1000 BC whereas a state was recognised only in 1787. The first state was Delaware.
- There are two types of States: federal state and sovereign state. There are two types of nations: a civic nation and an ethnic nation.
- The state has people who are bound by territories but the nation is about the people who feel the uniqueness and oneness in sharing the same history and culture.
References
- https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/mono/10.4324/9781003084815/borders-hastings-donnan-thomas-wilson
- https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=6VTHAAAAQBAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PP1&dq=nation+and+state+difference&ots=YwN_k-Uznr&sig=AogJa1LCeSkX9fXbJjVW1ObHT4I
Emma Smith holds an MA degree in English from Irvine Valley College. She has been a Journalist since 2002, writing articles on the English language, Sports, and Law. Read more about me on her bio page.
A state is a political association with effective sovereignty over a geographic area and representing a population. 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 «(successfully) claims 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. Recently much debate has surrounded the issue of State-building with competing schools of thought on how to support the emergence of capable states.
Definition
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 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.
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 and supportive institutions that have sovereignty over a definite territory and population.
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». [«state.» Online Etymology Dictionary. Douglas Harper, Historian. 26 February 2007. [Dictionary.com http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/state] .] 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.Skinner, Quentin. 1989. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0521359783&id=1QrSKH_Q5M8C&pg=RA1-PA6&lpg=RA1-PA6&ots=Nn0ouzVO1R&dq=Skinner+Political+Innovation+Conceptual+Change&sig=660qldsyiEPiohCBXir3QqAwCWE#PRA1-PA90,M1 The State] . In Political Innovation and Conceptual Change, edited by T. Ball, J. Farr and R. L. Hanson. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0521359783&id=1QrSKH_Q5M8C&pg=RA1-PA6&lpg=RA1-PA6&ots=Nn0ouzVO1R&dq=Skinner+Political+Innovation+Conceptual+Change&sig=660qldsyiEPiohCBXir3QqAwCWE#PRA1-PA90,M1 ISBN 0521359783] ]
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).Fact|date=February 2007 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.Jackson, Robert H., and Carl G. Rosberg. 1982. [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0043-8871%28198210%2935%3A1%3C1%3AWAWSPT%3E2.0.CO%3B2-K Why Africa’s Weak States Persist: The Empirical and The Juridical in Statehood] . World Politics 35 (1):1-24. [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0043-8871%28198210%2935%3A1%3C1%3AWAWSPT%3E2.0.CO%3B2-K] ]
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.Weber, Max. 1994. The Profession and Vocation of Politics. In [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0521397197&id=6uA68XdxBv4C&pg=PA394&lpg=PA394 Political Writings] . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0521397197&id=6uA68XdxBv4C&pg=PA394&lpg=PA394 ISBN 0521397197] .] 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.Bobbio, Norberto. 1989. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0816618135&id=4AE8ur83g8AC&pg=PP1&lpg=PP1&ots=8883y8Du41&dq=Bobbio+Democracy+and+Dictatorship&sig=kfL3Vpo83GuEdGmhXJMmTIbBNnw Democracy and Dictatorship: The Nature and Limits of State Power] . Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0816618135&id=4AE8ur83g8AC&pg=PP1&lpg=PP1&ots=8883y8Du41&dq=Bobbio+Democracy+and+Dictatorship&sig=kfL3Vpo83GuEdGmhXJMmTIbBNnw ISBN 0816618135] .]
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.Easton, David. 1990. The Analysis of Political Structure. New York: Routledge.]
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.Giddens, Anthony. 1987. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0520060393&id=wJu1Z4cTdsIC&pg=PA121&lpg=PA121&dq=Giddens+Contemporary+Critique+of+Historical+Materialism+the+Nation+State+and+Violence&sig=OwPRjSxlp6Hng4YHp74wHYWSaGQ#PPP1,M1A Contemporary Critique of Historical Materialism. 3 vols. Vol. II: The Nation-State and Violence] . Cambridge: Polity Press. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0520060393&id=wJu1Z4cTdsIC&pg=PA121&lpg=PA121&dq=Giddens+Contemporary+Critique+of+Historical+Materialism+the+Nation+State+and+Violence&sig=OwPRjSxlp6Hng4YHp74wHYWSaGQ#PPP1,M1 ISBN 0520060393] . See [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0520060393&id=wJu1Z4cTdsIC&pg=PA121&lpg=PA121&dq=Giddens+Contemporary+Critique+of+Historical+Materialism+the+Nation+State+and+Violence&sig=OwPRjSxlp6Hng4YHp74wHYWSaGQ#PPP7,M1 chapter 2] .]
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. Fact|date=July 2007 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. [Boehm, Christopher. 1999. [http://www.google.co.nz/books?id=ljxS8gUlgqgC|Hierarchy in the Forest] . Cambridge: Harvard University Press. [http://www.google.co.nz/books?id=ljxS8gUlgqgC|ISBN 0674006917] .]
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.Poggi, G. 1978. The Development of the Modern State: A Sociological Introduction. Stanford: Stanford University Press.]
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 Habsburgs, 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.Breuilly, John. 1993. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0719038006&id=6sEVmFtkpngC&pg=PP1&lpg=PP1&ots=jaRrjiINsh&dq=Breuilly+Nationalism+and+the+State&sig=xdUZ4zKU-os0Mx75Wk9gO3LuYhU Nationalism and the State] . New York: St. Martin’s Press. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0719038006&id=6sEVmFtkpngC&pg=PP1&lpg=PP1&ots=jaRrjiINsh&dq=Breuilly+Nationalism+and+the+State&sig=xdUZ4zKU-os0Mx75Wk9gO3LuYhU ISBN SBN0719038006] .]
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.
Today, most Western states more or less fit the influential definition of the state in Max Weber’s «Politics as a Vocation». According to Weber, the modern state monopolizes the means of legitimate physical violence over a well-defined territory. Moreover, the legitimacy of this monopoly itself is of a very special kind, «rational-legal» legitimacy, based on impersonal rules that constrain the power of state elites.
However, in some other parts of the world states do not fit Weber’s definition as well. They may not have a complete monopoly over the means of legitimate physical violence over a definite territory, or their legitimacy may not be adequately described as rational-legal. But they are still recognizably distinct from feudal and absolutist states in the extent of their bureaucratization and their reliance on nationalism as a principle of legitimation.
Since Weber, an extensive literature on the processes by which the «modern state» emerged from the feudal state has been generated. Marxist scholars, for example, assert that the formation of modern states can be explained primarily in terms of the interests and struggles of social classes.Anderson, Perry. 1979. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN086091710X&id=EhtMbM1Z8BkC&pg=PP1&lpg=PP1&ots=kKEFE8hSdz&dq=Perry+Anderson+Lineages+of+the+Absolutist+State&sig=6wtAz_EZf89y2x2Y6bZB3Rgkh6Y Lineages of the absolutist state] . London: Verso. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN086091710X&id=EhtMbM1Z8BkC&pg=PP1&lpg=PP1&ots=kKEFE8hSdz&dq=Perry+Anderson+Lineages+of+the+Absolutist+State&sig=6wtAz_EZf89y2x2Y6bZB3Rgkh6Y ISBN 086091710X] .]
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.Tilly, Charles. 1992. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN1557863687&id=w4zjW_RjNb0C&pg=PA1&lpg=PA1&ots=uKjqZcZf6T&dq=Coercion,+Capital,+and+European+States&sig=UjCM07nwXyw8otUoSLTmdiKYUs4 Coercion, Capital, and European States, AD 990-1992] . Cambridge, Massachusetts: B. Blackwell. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN1557863687&id=w4zjW_RjNb0C&pg=PA1&lpg=PA1&ots=uKjqZcZf6T&dq=Coercion,+Capital,+and+European+States&sig=UjCM07nwXyw8otUoSLTmdiKYUs4 ISBN 1557863687] .]
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 churches, 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. [Kjaer, Anne Mette. 2004. [http://www.amazon.com/dp/0745629792 Governance] . London: Verso. [http://www.amazon.com/dp/0745629792 ISBN 0745629792] ] Alfred Stepan also introduced the idea of `political society’ those organisations that move periodically between the state and non-state sectors (such as Political Parties). Whaites has argued that in developing countries there are dangers inherent in promoting strong civil society where states are weak, risks that should be considered and mitigated by those funding civil society or advocating its role as an alternative source of service provision [Alan Whaites. 1998. Viewpoint NGOs, civil society and the state: avoiding theoretical extremes in real world issues [http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content~content=a713661019~db=all~order=page Development in Practice] ] .
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 , 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. [Robert Dahl. 1973. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0135969816&id=9XY5gFcp6n0C&q=Dahl+Modern+Political+Analysis&dq=Dahl+Modern+Political+Analysis&pgis=1 Modern Political Analysis] . Prentice Hall. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0135969816&id=9XY5gFcp6n0C&q=Dahl+Modern+Political+Analysis&dq=Dahl+Modern+Political+Analysis&pgis=1 ISBN 0135969816] ]
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. [Sweezy, Paul. 1942. The Theory of Capitalist Development. New York: Monthly Review, ch. 13.] 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. [Miliband, Ralph. 1983. Class power and state power. London: Verso.] 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. [ Fred Block. 1977 «The Ruling Class Does Not Rule.» «Socialist Revolution» May-June.] 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. Anarcho-capitalists envision a free market guided by the invisible hand offering critical or valuable functions traditionally provided by to replace the state; other anarchists (such as Bakunin and Kropotkin in the 19th century) tend to put less emphasis on markets, arguing 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.
Anarchists consider the state to be the institutionalization of domination and privilege. According to key theoristsFact|date=November 2007, the state emerged to ratify and deepen the dominance of the victors of history. Unlike Marxists, 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.Fact|date=November 2007 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.
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. [Rueschemeyer, Dietrich, Theda Skocpol, and Peter B. Evans, eds. 1985. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0521313139&id=sYgTwHQbNAAC&pg=PP1&lpg=PP1&ots=Jyo8optLgc&dq=Skocpol+Rueschemeyer+Bringing+the+State+Back+In&sig=1m3dvluBo9jULIAoYBzEdhVnIeU Bringing the State Back In] . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN0521313139&id=sYgTwHQbNAAC&pg=PP1&lpg=PP1&ots=Jyo8optLgc&dq=Skocpol+Rueschemeyer+Bringing+the+State+Back+In&sig=1m3dvluBo9jULIAoYBzEdhVnIeU ISBN 0521313139] .]
‘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,» [Hobbes, Thomas. 1651. [http://oll.libertyfund.org/Texts/Hobbes0123/Leviathan1909/HTMLs/0161_Pt02_Part1.html#LF-BK0161pt01ch13 Leviathan] . Part I, chapter 13.] 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. [Locke, John. 1689. [http://oll.libertyfund.org/Home3/HTML.php?recordID=0364#hd_lf128-04_head_025 Two Treatises of Government] . Second Treatise, chapter 2.] 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.» [Foucault, Michel. 2000 [1976] . Truth and Power. In [http://www.amazon.com/dp/1565847091 Power] , edited by J. D. Fearon. New York: The New Press, p. 123. [http://www.amazon.com/dp/1565847091 ISBN 1565847091] ] 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.
Others have advocated the consideration of the state within the context of complex underlying elite relationships, themselves shaped by factors that include outside pressures. This work has been prominent in the thinking of State-building theorists such as Alan Whaites, who focuses on dynamics shaping the nature and capability of states. Whaites’ model of state-building offers a conceptualization of why some states work well and others become characterized by patronage, corruption and conflict. [Whaites, Alan, States in Development: Understanding State-building, [http://www.dfid.gov.uk/pubs/files/State-in-Development-Wkg-Paper.pdf] ]
See also
* Country
* Elite theory
* Failed state
* International relations
* List of countries by date of nationhood
* List of sovereign states
* Montevideo Convention
* Nation
* Nation-building
* Police state
* Political power
* Political settlement
* Province
* Regional state
* Social contract
* State-building
* State country
* Statism
* The justification of the state
* The purpose of government
* U.S. state
* Unitary state
References
Wikimedia Foundation.
2010.
The state is the most universal and most powerful of all social institutions.
THE STATE AND ITS ELEMENTS
Definitions :
The state is the most universal and most powerful of all social institutions. The state is a natural institution. Aristotle said man is a social animal and by nature he is a political being. To him, to live in the state and to be a man were indentical.
The modern term ‘state’ is derived from the word ‘status’. It was Niccolo Machiavelli ( 1469 — 1527) who first used the term ‘state’ in his writings. His important work is titled as ‘Prince’.
The state is the highest form of human association. It is necessary because it comes into existence out of the basic needs of life. It continues to remain for the sake of good life.
The aims, desires and aspirations of human beings are translated into action through the state. Though the state is a necessary institution, no two writers agree on its definition.
To Woodrow Wilson, ‘State is a people organized for law within a definite territory.’
Aristotle defined the state as a ‘union of families and villages having for its end a perfect and self — sufficing life by which it meant a happy and honourable life’.
To Holland, the state is ‘a numerous assemblage of human beings generally occupying a certain territory amongst whom the will of the majority or class is made to privail against any of their number who oppose it.’
Burgess defines the state as ‘a particular portion of mankind According to Sidgwick. ‘State is a combination or association of persons in the form of government and governed and united together into a politically organized people of a definite territory.’
According to Garner, ‘State is a community of people occupying a definite form of territory free of external control and possessing an organized government to which people show habitual obedience.’
Prof. Laski defines ‘state as a territorial society divided into government and subjects whose relationships are determined by the exercise of supreme coercive power.’
Elements :
From the above definitions, it is clear that the following are the elements of the state :-
Physical bases of the State
1.Population
2. Territory
Political bases of the State
1.Government
2.Soverignty
Elements of the State
Population :
It is the people who make the state. Population is essential for the state. Greek thinkers were of the view that the population should neither be too big nor too small. According to Plato the ideal number would be 5040.
According to Aristotle, the number should be neither too large nor too small. It should be large enough to be self — sufficing and small enough to be well governed. Rousseau
determined 10,000 to be an ideal number for a state. Greek thinkers like Plato and Aristotle thinking on the number was based on small city — states like Athens and Sparta. Modern states vary in population. India has a population of 102,70,15,247 people according to 2001 census.
Territory :
There can be no state without a fixed territory. People need territory to live and organize themselves socially and politically. It may be remembered that the territory of the state includes land, water and air — space.
The modern states differ in their sizes. Territory is necessary for citizenship. As in the case of population, no definite size with regard to extent of area of the state can be fixed. There are small and big states.
In the words of Prof. Elliott ‘territorial sovereignty or the Superiority of state overall within its boundaries and complete freedom from external control has been a fundamental principle of the modern state life’.
India has an area of 32,87,263 sq. km. Approximately India occupies 2.4% of the global area.
Government :
Government is the third element of the state. There can be no state without government. Government is the working agency of the state. It is the political organization of the state.
Prof. Appadorai defined government as the agency through which the will of the State is formulated, expressed and realized.
According to C.F. Strong, in order to make and enforce laws the state must have supreme authority. This is called the government.
Sovereignty :
The fourth essential element of the state is sovereignty.
The word ‘sovereignty’ means supreme and final legal authority above and beyond which no legal power exists.
The concept of ‘sovereignty’ was developed in conjunction with the rise of the modern state. The term Sovereignty is derived from the Latin word superanus which means supreme. the father of modern theory of sovereignty was Jean Bodin (1530 — 1597) a French political thinker.
Sovereignty has two aspects :
1) Internal sovereignty
2) External sovereignty
Internal sovereignty means that the State is supreme over all its citizens, and associations.
External sovereignty means that the state is independent and free from foreign or outside control.
According to Harold J. Laski, ‘It is by possession of sovereignty that the state is distinguished from all other
forms of human association.
The diagram given below shows that the society is the outer most and the government is the inner most.
State and Society
The society consists of a large number of individuals, families, group and institutions. The early political thinkers considered both state and society as one. State is a part of society but is not a form of society.
Prof. Earnest Barker in his book entitled ‘Principles of Social and Political Theory’ clearly brings out the difference between state and society under three headings. They are,
1. Purpose or function
2. Organisation and structure
3. Method
From the point of view of purpose the state is a legal association, which acts for the single purpose of making and
enforcing a permanent system of law and order.
But society comprising of a plurality of associations, acts for a variety of purposes other than legal.
These purposes are
1. Intellectual
2. Moral
3. Religious
4. Economic
5. Aesthetic and
6. Recreational
The membership of the state and society are the same. But they differ as regards purpose. The state exists for one great but single, purpose; society exists for a number of purposes some great and some small, but all in their aggregate deep as well as broad.
From the point of view of organization the state is a single organization — legal, whereas society comprises within itself many organizations.
As regards method as pointed out before the state employs the method of coercion or compulsion, society employs method of voluntary action.
The purposes for which society exists makes the persuasive methods necessary and the multiplicity of its organization give ample opportunity to the members to relinquish one association and join another in case coercion is ever attempted.
State and Nation:
The word ‘nation’ is derived from the Latin word ‘natio’ hich means birth or race. The terms nation and state are used as synonym.
According to Leacock, a nation is a body of people united by common descent and language.
But the modern writers do not emphasise the racial aspects so much as the psychological and spiritual. It has acquired a political meaning in the recent times.
People who share common ideas and naturally linked to gether by some affinities and united are now called a nation. In the case of state feeling of oneness is not necessary as in the case of the four elements constituting the State.
Since the Second World War (1939-1945) the theory of ‘one nation, one state’ has become the practical politics with all nations and new nation states have been created after the Second World War. After 1947 India became the nation state.
If a nation with self — government becomes independent, a nation state comes into existence.
State and Government:
Government is often used with the ‘state’ as synonym.
But both the government and the state are two different entities. There are differences between the state and the government.
State
1. State consists of population, territory, government and sovereignty.
2. State possesses original powers.
3. State is permanent and continues forever.
4. State is abstract and invisible.
Government
1. Government is part of the state.
2. Powers of the government are derived from the state.
3. Government is temporary. It may come and go.
4. Government is concrete and is visible.
Branches of government
Legislature : Make laws
Executive : Veto legislation Recommend legislation
Judiciary : Review legislative acts
Legislature : Confirm exective appointments Overide excutive veto
Executive : Enforece laws
Judiciary : Review Executive acts Issues injunctions
Legislature : Impeach Create or eliminate courts
Executive : Grand pardons Nominate judges
Judiciary : Interpret laws
Executive:
It is one of the three branches of government as given
above.
State functions through the executive, the namely the government. It is the duty of the executive or enforce the laws passed by the legislature.
The executive who exercise real power is the real executive. The executive who has nominal power is the normal executive.
The President of India is the nominal executive. The union council of ministers led by the Prime Minister of India is the real executive.
Parliamentary executive is chosen from the legislature and is responsible to the legislature. The executive in India is parliamentary in its character.
Powers and functions of executive are :
1. Enforcing law
2. Maintaining peace and order.
3. Repelling aggression.
4. Building friendly relations with other states
5. When necessary to wage war to protect the country.
6. Making appointments to higher posts.
7. Raising money and spending them.
8. Convening the sessions of the legislature and conducting business.
9. Issues ordinances whenever the legislature is to in session.
10. Implement schemes and projects to improve he social and economic conditions of the people.
11. Power to grant pardon, reprieve or remission of punishment.
Legislature :
The legislature is the law making branch. The legislature has an important role in the amendment of the constitution. The legislature is a deliberative body where matters of social, economic and political concerns are discussed, debated and decided.
The British parliament is said to be ‘the mother of parliaments’. It is the oldest legislature in the world.
According to Prof. Laski, law- making is not the only function of the legislature but its real function is to watch the process of administration to safeguard the liberties of private citizens. The legislature of the union is called the parliament in India. It consists of two chambers.
The House of the People or the Lok Sabha as the Lower House.
The Council of State or the Rajya Sabha as the Upper House
The functions of legislature are
a) Enact laws
b) Oversee administration
c) Pass the budget
d) Hear public grieveances.
e) Discuss subjects like
1) Development plans
2) National policies
3) International relations.
Judiciary:
Judiciary is the third important organ of the government machinery. Its main function is to interrupter laws and administer justice.
Lord Bryce has said that there is to better test of excellence of government than the efficiency of its judicial system.The welfare of citizens depends to a larger extent upon the judiciary.
Judiciary is one of the pillars of democracy. Its interpretation ensures justice, equality and liberty to all its citizens. An independent and impartial judiciary is an essential feature of a democratic setup.
The Supreme Court of India consists of a Chief Justice and other judges. The Supreme Court has its permanent seat in Delhi.
According to Justice Hughes, ‘we are under a constitution, but the constitution is what the judges say it is’.
Functions of Judiciary:
1. Administration of justice.
2. To determine what is law and what is the cope and meaning of it.
3. To give advisory opinion on matters referred to it.
Study Material, Lecturing Notes, Assignment, Reference, Wiki description explanation, brief detail
11th 12th std standard Political Science History goverment rule laws life Higher secondary school College Notes : Political Science : The State And Its Elements |
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This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.
noun
the condition of a person or thing, as with respect to circumstances or attributes: a state of health.
the condition of matter with respect to structure, form, constitution, phase, or the like: water in a gaseous state.
status, rank, or position in life; station: He dresses in a manner befitting his state.
the style of living befitting a person of wealth and high rank: to travel in state.
a particular condition of mind or feeling: to be in an excited state.
an abnormally tense, nervous, or perturbed condition: He’s been in a state since hearing about his brother’s death.
a politically unified people occupying a definite territory; nation.
the territory, or one of the territories, of a government.
Sometimes State . any of the bodies politic which together make up a federal union, as in the United States of America.
the body politic as organized for civil rule and government (distinguished from church).
the operations or activities of a central civil government: affairs of state.
Printing. a set of copies of an edition of a publication which differ from others of the same printing because of additions, corrections, or transpositions made during printing or at any time before publication.
the States, Informal. the United States (usually used outside its borders): After a year’s study in Spain, he returned to the States.
adjective
of or relating to the central civil government or authority.
made, maintained, or chartered by or under the authority of one of the commonwealths that make up a federal union: a state highway;a state bank.
characterized by, attended with, or involving ceremony: a state dinner.
used on or reserved for occasions of ceremony.
verb (used with object), stat·ed, stat·ing.
to declare definitely or specifically: She stated her position on the case.
to set forth formally in speech or writing: to state a hypothesis.
to set forth in proper or definite form: to state a problem.
to say.
to fix or settle, as by authority.
QUIZ
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Which sentence is correct?
Idioms about state
lie in state, (of a corpse) to be exhibited publicly with honors before burial: The president’s body lay in state for two days.
Origin of state
First recorded in 1175–1225; Middle English noun stat(e), partly from estat estate, partly from Latin status “condition” (see status); the meanings in defs. 7-11 derive from Latin status (rērum) ) “state (of things)” or status (reī pūblicae) “state (of the republic)”
synonym study for state
1. State, condition, situation, status are terms for existing circumstances or surroundings. State is the general word, often with no concrete implications or material relationships: the present state of affairs. Condition carries an implication of a relationship to causes and circumstances: The conditions made flying impossible. Situation suggests an arrangement of circumstances, related to one another and to the character of a person: He was master of the situation. Status carries official or legal implications; it suggests a complete picture of interrelated circumstances as having to do with rank, position, standing, a stage reached in progress, etc.: the status of negotiations. 19. See maintain.
historical usage of state
The history of the English noun state is complicated. It derives from both Old French and Latin. The Old French noun is estat, estate “general state or condition (material, bodily, moral, mental),” also the source of the English word estate “landed property.” Estat is a normal French development from Latin status “a standing, stance, physical state or circumstances, (public) order.” Latin status derives from the verb stāre “to stand,” from the very widespread Proto-Indo-European root stā- (and its many extensions) “to stand,” source of Greek histánai (from prehistoric sistánai with reduplication), Germanic (Old English) standan (English stand ), and Slavic (Polish) stać.
The e in estat is called a prothetic e ( prothetikós means “prefixed” in Greek). The prothetic e appears in the Romance languages of France (French, Provençal), and the Iberian Peninsula (Castilian, Portuguese, Catalan), and in Logudorese (the most conservative dialect of the Sardinian language). For example, Latin schola “school” appears as école in French (from earlier escole ), escòla in Provençal, escuela in Castilian, escola in Portuguese and Catalan, and iscola in Logudorese. The prothetic e was never common in Italy except to avoid ungainly consonant clusters; thus Italian la scuola “the school” becomes per iscuola “for school.” Prothesis persists in modern Spanish, Portuguese, and Catalan: “station” is estación, estação, and estació, respectively, but it is no longer productive in French (“station” is station ) or Italian ( stazione ). Prothesis has never been common in Romanian (“school” is şcoală ).
OTHER WORDS FROM state
stat·a·ble, state·a·ble, adjectivean·ti·state, adjectivecoun·ter·state, verb, coun·ter·stat·ed, coun·ter·stat·ing.out·state, verb (used with object), out·stat·ed, out·stat·ing.
sub·state, nounun·stat·a·ble, adjectiveun·state·a·ble, adjective
Words nearby state
Stassen, stat, statampere, statant, statcoulomb, state, state aid, state bank, state bird, state capitalism, state chamber
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Words related to state
case, community, federation, land, nation, territory, union, affirm, articulate, describe, explain, expound, express, give, present, put, say, set forth, speak, specify
How to use state in a sentence
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Halfway there, however, we passed two of the largest waterfalls in the state.
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Due to the chemicals and the state the hair has been in, it will initially be damaged, but she will have hair.
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Details were kept secret by 50-a, a state law that has barred the public from seeing police discipline records.
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That’s why Abdur-Rahim pushed the G League, which typically functions like the NBA’s minor leagues, to offer financial, personal and professional incentives to keep elite high school players in the states.
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Simon operates more than 200 properties in 38 states, all of which had to shutter operations in late March due to the pandemic.
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Dental leaders barnstormed the state, and cities began to fluoridate.
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But on Thursday Boxer triggered a Golden State political earthquake, announcing that she would not seek a fifth term in 2016.
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Meanwhile, in Florida, Bush was flooded with questions about whether gay marriage could possibly come to the Sunshine State.
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This week, Florida became the 36th state to allow same-sex marriage.
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But if you have a hearing and you prove that someone is mature enough, well then that state interest evaporates.
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If we can free this State of Yankees, we will accomplish more than your armies down south have.
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Walls End Castle, when the party broke up, returned to its normal state.
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The next morning he came rushing into the office, in a violent state of excitement.
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He could not tell what I meant by secrets of state, where an enemy or some rival nation were not in the case.
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From the very first of the war their work was to help exterminate the guerrilla bands which infested the State.
British Dictionary definitions for state
noun
the condition of a person, thing, etc, with regard to main attributes
the structure, form, or constitution of somethinga solid state
any mode of existence
position in life or society; estate
ceremonious style, as befitting wealth or dignityto live in state
a sovereign political power or community
the territory occupied by such a community
the sphere of power in such a communityaffairs of state
(often capital) one of a number of areas or communities having their own governments and forming a federation under a sovereign government, as in the US
(often capital) the body politic of a particular sovereign power, esp as contrasted with a rival authority such as the Church
obsolete a class or order; estate
informal a nervous, upset, or excited condition (esp in the phrase in a state)
lie in state (of a body) to be placed on public view before burial
state of affairs a situation; present circumstances or condition
state of play the current situation
adjective
controlled or financed by a statestate university
of, relating to, or concerning the StateState trial
involving ceremony or concerned with a ceremonious occasionstate visit
verb (tr; may take a clause as object)
to articulate in words; utter
to declare formally or publiclyto state one’s innocence
Derived forms of state
statable or stateable, adjectivestatehood, noun
Word Origin for state
C13: from Old French estat, from Latin status a standing, from stāre to stand
Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Other Idioms and Phrases with state
In addition to the idiom beginning with state
- state of the art
also see:
- in a lather (state)
- in state
- ship of state
The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Prefixes of state
-
estate
- noun everything you own; all of your assets (whether real property or personal property) and liabilities
- noun extensive landed property (especially in the country) retained by the owner for his own use
land; demesne; landed estate; acres.- the family owned a large estate on Long Island
- More ‘estate’ Meaning
- estate Idioms/Phrases
- estate Associated Words
- estate Prefix/Suffix Words
- estate Related Words
-
prostate
- noun a firm partly muscular chestnut sized gland in males at the neck of the urethra; produces a viscid secretion that is the fluid part of semen
prostate gland. - adjective relating to the prostate gland
prostatic.
- More ‘prostate’ Meaning
- prostate Idioms/Phrases
- prostate Associated Words
- prostate Prefix/Suffix Words
- prostate Related Words
- noun a firm partly muscular chestnut sized gland in males at the neck of the urethra; produces a viscid secretion that is the fluid part of semen
-
interstate
- noun one of the system of highways linking major cities in the 48 contiguous states of the United States
interstate highway. - adjective involving and relating to the mutual relations of states especially of the United States
- Interstate Highway Commission
- interstate highways
- Interstate Commerce Commission
- interstate commerce
- More ‘interstate’ Meaning
- interstate Idioms/Phrases
- interstate Associated Words
- interstate Prefix/Suffix Words
- interstate Related Words
- noun one of the system of highways linking major cities in the 48 contiguous states of the United States
-
reinstate
- verb restore to the previous state or rank
- verb bring back into original existence, use, function, or position
restore; reestablish.- restore law and order
- reestablish peace in the region
- restore the emperor to the throne
- More ‘reinstate’ Meaning
- reinstate Associated Words
- reinstate Prefix/Suffix Words
- reinstate Related Words
-
restate
- verb to say, state, or perform again
reiterate; repeat; ingeminate; retell; iterate.- She kept reiterating her request
- More ‘restate’ Meaning
- restate Associated Words
- restate Prefix/Suffix Words
- restate Related Words
- verb to say, state, or perform again
-
intestate
- adjective having made no legally valid will before death or not disposed of by a legal will
- he died intestate
- intestate property
- More ‘intestate’ Meaning
- intestate Associated Words
- intestate Prefix/Suffix Words
- intestate Related Words
- adjective having made no legally valid will before death or not disposed of by a legal will
-
apostate
- noun a disloyal person who betrays or deserts his cause or religion or political party or friend etc.
ratter; renegade; deserter; turncoat; recreant. - adjective satellite not faithful to religion or party or cause
- More ‘apostate’ Meaning
- apostate Idioms/Phrases
- apostate Associated Words
- apostate Prefix/Suffix Words
- apostate Related Words
- noun a disloyal person who betrays or deserts his cause or religion or political party or friend etc.
-
overstate
- verb to enlarge beyond bounds or the truth
overdraw; magnify; exaggerate; hyperbolize; hyperbolise; amplify.- tended to romanticize and exaggerate this `gracious Old South’ imagery
- More ‘overstate’ Meaning
- overstate Associated Words
- overstate Prefix/Suffix Words
- overstate Related Words
- verb to enlarge beyond bounds or the truth
-
upstate
- adverb in or toward the northern parts of a state
- he lives upstate New York
- More ‘upstate’ Meaning
- upstate Associated Words
- upstate Related Words
- adverb in or toward the northern parts of a state
-
understate
- verb represent as less significant or important
minimize; downplay; minimise.
- More ‘understate’ Meaning
- understate Associated Words
- understate Prefix/Suffix Words
- understate Related Words
- verb represent as less significant or important
-
devastate
- verb cause extensive destruction or ruin utterly
desolate; scourge; lay waste to; ravage; waste.- The enemy lay waste to the countryside after the invasion
- verb overwhelm or overpower
- He was devastated by his grief when his son died
- More ‘devastate’ Meaning
- devastate Associated Words
- devastate Prefix/Suffix Words
- devastate Related Words
- verb cause extensive destruction or ruin utterly
-
testate
- noun a person who makes a will
testator. - adjective having made a legally valid will before death
- More ‘testate’ Meaning
- testate Associated Words
- testate Prefix/Suffix Words
- testate Related Words
- noun a person who makes a will
-
intrastate
- adjective relating to or existing within the boundaries of a state
- intrastate as well as interstate commerce
- More ‘intrastate’ Meaning
- intrastate Associated Words
- intrastate Related Words
- adjective relating to or existing within the boundaries of a state
-
misstate
- verb state something incorrectly
- You misstated my position
- More ‘misstate’ Meaning
- misstate Associated Words
- misstate Prefix/Suffix Words
- misstate Related Words
- verb state something incorrectly
-
gestate
- verb have the idea for
conceive; conceptualize; conceptualise.- He conceived of a robot that would help paralyzed patients
- This library was well conceived
- verb be pregnant with
carry; have a bun in the oven; bear; expect.- She is bearing his child
- The are expecting another child in January
- I am carrying his child
- More ‘gestate’ Meaning
- gestate Associated Words
- gestate Prefix/Suffix Words
- gestate Related Words
- verb have the idea for
-
tungstate
- noun a salt of tungstic acid
- More ‘tungstate’ Meaning
- tungstate Associated Words
- tungstate Prefix/Suffix Words
- tungstate Related Words
-
costate
- adjective satellite (of the surface) having a rough, riblike texture
ribbed. - adjective satellite having ribs
- More ‘costate’ Meaning
- costate Associated Words
- costate Related Words
- adjective satellite (of the surface) having a rough, riblike texture
-
hastate
- adjective satellite (of a leaf shape) like a spear point, with flaring pointed lobes at the base
spearhead-shaped.
- More ‘hastate’ Meaning
- hastate Idioms/Phrases
- hastate Associated Words
- hastate Related Words
- adjective satellite (of a leaf shape) like a spear point, with flaring pointed lobes at the base
Suffixes of state
-
state
- noun the territory occupied by one of the constituent administrative districts of a nation
province.- his state is in the deep south
- noun the way something is with respect to its main attributes
- the current state of knowledge
- his state of health
- in a weak financial state
- More ‘state’ Meaning
- states Associated Words
- states Prefix/Suffix Words
- states Related Words
- noun the territory occupied by one of the constituent administrative districts of a nation
-
statement
- noun a message that is stated or declared; a communication (oral or written) setting forth particulars or facts etc
- according to his statement he was in London on that day
- noun a fact or assertion offered as evidence that something is true
argument.- it was a strong argument that his hypothesis was true
- More ‘statement’ Meaning
- statement Idioms/Phrases
- statement Associated Words
- statement Prefix/Suffix Words
- statement Related Words
- noun a message that is stated or declared; a communication (oral or written) setting forth particulars or facts etc
-
stated
- adjective satellite declared as fact; explicitly stated
declared. - verb express in words
state; say; tell.- He said that he wanted to marry her
- tell me what is bothering you
- state your opinion
- state your name
- More ‘stated’ Meaning
- stated Associated Words
- stated Prefix/Suffix Words
- stated Related Words
- adjective satellite declared as fact; explicitly stated
-
statement
- noun a message that is stated or declared; a communication (oral or written) setting forth particulars or facts etc
- according to his statement he was in London on that day
- noun a fact or assertion offered as evidence that something is true
argument.- it was a strong argument that his hypothesis was true
- More ‘statement’ Meaning
- statements Associated Words
- statements Prefix/Suffix Words
- statements Related Words
- noun a message that is stated or declared; a communication (oral or written) setting forth particulars or facts etc
-
stately
- adjective satellite impressive in appearance
imposing; noble; baronial.- a baronial mansion
- an imposing residence
- a noble tree
- severe-looking policemen sat astride noble horses
- stately columns
- adjective satellite of size and dignity suggestive of a statue
statuesque.
- More ‘stately’ Meaning
- stately Idioms/Phrases
- stately Associated Words
- stately Related Words
- adjective satellite impressive in appearance
-
statesman
- noun a man who is a respected leader in national or international affairs
solon; national leader.
- More ‘statesman’ Meaning
- statesman Idioms/Phrases
- statesman Associated Words
- statesman Prefix/Suffix Words
- statesman Related Words
- noun a man who is a respected leader in national or international affairs
-
statesman
- noun a man who is a respected leader in national or international affairs
solon; national leader.
- More ‘statesman’ Meaning
- statesmen Associated Words
- statesmen Related Words
- noun a man who is a respected leader in national or international affairs
-
statewide
- adjective satellite occurring or extending throughout a state
- the statewide recycling program
- More ‘statewide’ Meaning
- statewide Associated Words
- statewide Related Words
- adjective satellite occurring or extending throughout a state
-
statecraft
- noun wisdom in the management of public affairs
statesmanship; diplomacy.
- More ‘statecraft’ Meaning
- statecraft Associated Words
- statecraft Related Words
- noun wisdom in the management of public affairs
-
statesmanship
- noun wisdom in the management of public affairs
diplomacy; statecraft.
- More ‘statesmanship’ Meaning
- statesmanship Associated Words
- statesmanship Related Words
- noun wisdom in the management of public affairs
-
stateless
- adjective satellite without nationality or citizenship
homeless.- stateless persons
- More ‘stateless’ Meaning
- stateless Idioms/Phrases
- stateless Associated Words
- stateless Prefix/Suffix Words
- stateless Related Words
- adjective satellite without nationality or citizenship
-
stateliness
- noun an elaborate manner of doing something
- she served coffee with great stateliness
- noun impressiveness in scale or proportion
loftiness; majesty.
- More ‘stateliness’ Meaning
- stateliness Associated Words
- stateliness Related Words
- noun an elaborate manner of doing something
-
statesmanlike
- adjective marked by the qualities of or befitting a statesman
statesmanly.- a man of statesmanlike judgment
- a statesmanlike solution of the present perplexities»-V.L.Parrington
- More ‘statesmanlike’ Meaning
- statesmanlike Associated Words
- statesmanlike Related Words
- adjective marked by the qualities of or befitting a statesman
-
stater
- noun any of the various silver or gold coins of ancient Greece
- noun a resident of a particular state or group of states
- Keystone stater
- farm staters
- More ‘stater’ Meaning
- staters Associated Words
- staters Related Words
-
stateroom
- noun a guest cabin
- More ‘stateroom’ Meaning
- stateroom Associated Words
- stateroom Prefix/Suffix Words
- stateroom Related Words
-
stateroom
- noun a guest cabin
- More ‘stateroom’ Meaning
- staterooms Associated Words
- staterooms Related Words
-
stately
- adjective satellite impressive in appearance
imposing; noble; baronial.- a baronial mansion
- an imposing residence
- a noble tree
- severe-looking policemen sat astride noble horses
- stately columns
- adjective satellite of size and dignity suggestive of a statue
statuesque.
- More ‘stately’ Meaning
- stateliest Associated Words
- stateliest Related Words
- adjective satellite impressive in appearance
-
stately
- adjective satellite impressive in appearance
imposing; noble; baronial.- a baronial mansion
- an imposing residence
- a noble tree
- severe-looking policemen sat astride noble horses
- stately columns
- adjective satellite of size and dignity suggestive of a statue
statuesque.
- More ‘stately’ Meaning
- statelier Associated Words
- statelier Related Words
- adjective satellite impressive in appearance
-
stater
- noun any of the various silver or gold coins of ancient Greece
- noun a resident of a particular state or group of states
- Keystone stater
- farm staters
- More ‘stater’ Meaning
- stater Idioms/Phrases
- stater Associated Words
- stater Prefix/Suffix Words
- stater Related Words
-
stateswoman
- noun a woman statesman
- More ‘stateswoman’ Meaning
- stateswoman Associated Words
- stateswoman Related Words
-
statehouse
- noun a government building in which a state legislature meets
- More ‘statehouse’ Meaning
- statehouses Associated Words
- statehouses Related Words
-
statement
- noun a message that is stated or declared; a communication (oral or written) setting forth particulars or facts etc
- according to his statement he was in London on that day
- noun a fact or assertion offered as evidence that something is true
argument.- it was a strong argument that his hypothesis was true
- More ‘statement’ Meaning
- statementing Associated Words
- statementing Related Words
- noun a message that is stated or declared; a communication (oral or written) setting forth particulars or facts etc
-
stated
- adjective satellite declared as fact; explicitly stated
declared. - verb express in words
state; say; tell.- He said that he wanted to marry her
- tell me what is bothering you
- state your opinion
- state your name
- More ‘stated’ Meaning
- statedly Associated Words
- statedly Related Words
- adjective satellite declared as fact; explicitly stated
-
statement
- noun a message that is stated or declared; a communication (oral or written) setting forth particulars or facts etc
- according to his statement he was in London on that day
- noun a fact or assertion offered as evidence that something is true
argument.- it was a strong argument that his hypothesis was true
- More ‘statement’ Meaning
- statemented Associated Words
- statemented Related Words
- noun a message that is stated or declared; a communication (oral or written) setting forth particulars or facts etc
-
state
- noun the territory occupied by one of the constituent administrative districts of a nation
province.- his state is in the deep south
- noun the way something is with respect to its main attributes
- the current state of knowledge
- his state of health
- in a weak financial state
- More ‘state’ Meaning
- states’ Associated Words
- states’ Related Words
- noun the territory occupied by one of the constituent administrative districts of a nation
Derived words of state
-
estate
- noun everything you own; all of your assets (whether real property or personal property) and liabilities
- noun extensive landed property (especially in the country) retained by the owner for his own use
land; demesne; landed estate; acres.- the family owned a large estate on Long Island
- More ‘estate’ Meaning
- estates Associated Words
- estates Prefix/Suffix Words
- estates Related Words
-
restatement
- noun a revised statement
- More ‘restatement’ Meaning
- restatement Associated Words
- restatement Prefix/Suffix Words
- restatement Related Words
-
devastate
- verb cause extensive destruction or ruin utterly
desolate; scourge; lay waste to; ravage; waste.- The enemy lay waste to the countryside after the invasion
- verb overwhelm or overpower
- He was devastated by his grief when his son died
- More ‘devastate’ Meaning
- devastated Associated Words
- devastated Related Words
- verb cause extensive destruction or ruin utterly
-
understatement
- noun a statement that is restrained in ironic contrast to what might have been said
- More ‘understatement’ Meaning
- understatement Associated Words
- understatement Prefix/Suffix Words
- understatement Related Words
-
reinstatement
- noun the condition of being reinstated
- her reinstatement to her former office followed quickly
- noun the act of restoring someone to a previous position
- we insisted on the reinstatement of the colonel
- More ‘reinstatement’ Meaning
- reinstatement Associated Words
- reinstatement Prefix/Suffix Words
- reinstatement Related Words
- noun the condition of being reinstated
-
misstatement
- noun a statement that contains a mistake
- More ‘misstatement’ Meaning
- misstatement Associated Words
- misstatement Prefix/Suffix Words
- misstatement Related Words
-
reinstate
- verb restore to the previous state or rank
- verb bring back into original existence, use, function, or position
restore; reestablish.- restore law and order
- reestablish peace in the region
- restore the emperor to the throne
- More ‘reinstate’ Meaning
- reinstated Associated Words
- reinstated Related Words
-
understated
- adjective satellite exhibiting restrained good taste
unostentatious; unpretentious.- the room is pleasant and understated
- verb represent as less significant or important
minimize; downplay; understate; minimise.
- More ‘understated’ Meaning
- understated Associated Words
- understated Related Words
- adjective satellite exhibiting restrained good taste
-
restate
- verb to say, state, or perform again
reiterate; repeat; ingeminate; retell; iterate.- She kept reiterating her request
- More ‘restate’ Meaning
- restated Associated Words
- restated Prefix/Suffix Words
- restated Related Words
- verb to say, state, or perform again
-
overstated
- adjective satellite represented as greater than is true or reasonable
exaggerated; overdone.- an exaggerated opinion of oneself
- verb to enlarge beyond bounds or the truth
overdraw; magnify; exaggerate; overstate; hyperbolize; hyperbolise; amplify.- tended to romanticize and exaggerate this `gracious Old South’ imagery
- More ‘overstated’ Meaning
- overstated Associated Words
- overstated Related Words
- adjective satellite represented as greater than is true or reasonable
-
unstated
- adjective satellite not made explicit
unexpressed; unverbalised; unvoiced; unuttered; unverbalized; unspoken; unsaid.- the unexpressed terms of the agreement
- things left unsaid
- some kind of unspoken agreement
- his action is clear but his reason remains unstated
- More ‘unstated’ Meaning
- unstated Associated Words
- unstated Related Words
- adjective satellite not made explicit
-
prostatectomy
- noun surgical removal of part or all of the prostate gland
- More ‘prostatectomy’ Meaning
- prostatectomy Associated Words
- prostatectomy Prefix/Suffix Words
- prostatectomy Related Words
-
misstate
- verb state something incorrectly
- You misstated my position
- More ‘misstate’ Meaning
- misstated Associated Words
- misstated Related Words
- verb state something incorrectly
-
misstatement
- noun a statement that contains a mistake
- More ‘misstatement’ Meaning
- misstatements Associated Words
- misstatements Related Words
-
restatement
- noun a revised statement
- More ‘restatement’ Meaning
- restatements Associated Words
- restatements Related Words
-
restate
- verb to say, state, or perform again
reiterate; repeat; ingeminate; retell; iterate.- She kept reiterating her request
- More ‘restate’ Meaning
- restates Associated Words
- restates Prefix/Suffix Words
- restates Related Words
- verb to say, state, or perform again
-
understate
- verb represent as less significant or important
minimize; downplay; minimise.
- More ‘understate’ Meaning
- understates Associated Words
- understates Related Words
- verb represent as less significant or important
-
reinstate
- verb restore to the previous state or rank
- verb bring back into original existence, use, function, or position
restore; reestablish.- restore law and order
- reestablish peace in the region
- restore the emperor to the throne
- More ‘reinstate’ Meaning
- reinstates Associated Words
- reinstates Related Words
-
overstatement
- noun making to seem more important than it really is
magnification; exaggeration.
- More ‘overstatement’ Meaning
- overstatement Associated Words
- overstatement Prefix/Suffix Words
- overstatement Related Words
- noun making to seem more important than it really is
-
apostate
- noun a disloyal person who betrays or deserts his cause or religion or political party or friend etc.
ratter; renegade; deserter; turncoat; recreant. - adjective satellite not faithful to religion or party or cause
- More ‘apostate’ Meaning
- apostates Associated Words
- apostates Related Words
- noun a disloyal person who betrays or deserts his cause or religion or political party or friend etc.
-
overstate
- verb to enlarge beyond bounds or the truth
overdraw; magnify; exaggerate; hyperbolize; hyperbolise; amplify.- tended to romanticize and exaggerate this `gracious Old South’ imagery
- More ‘overstate’ Meaning
- overstates Associated Words
- overstates Related Words
- verb to enlarge beyond bounds or the truth
-
interstate
- noun one of the system of highways linking major cities in the 48 contiguous states of the United States
interstate highway. - adjective involving and relating to the mutual relations of states especially of the United States
- Interstate Highway Commission
- interstate highways
- Interstate Commerce Commission
- interstate commerce
- More ‘interstate’ Meaning
- interstates Associated Words
- interstates Related Words
- noun one of the system of highways linking major cities in the 48 contiguous states of the United States
-
misstate
- verb state something incorrectly
- You misstated my position
- More ‘misstate’ Meaning
- misstates Associated Words
- misstates Related Words
- verb state something incorrectly
-
understatement
- noun a statement that is restrained in ironic contrast to what might have been said
- More ‘understatement’ Meaning
- understatements Associated Words
- understatements Related Words
-
reinstatement
- noun the condition of being reinstated
- her reinstatement to her former office followed quickly
- noun the act of restoring someone to a previous position
- we insisted on the reinstatement of the colonel
- More ‘reinstatement’ Meaning
- reinstatements Associated Words
- reinstatements Related Words
- noun the condition of being reinstated
-
devastate
- verb cause extensive destruction or ruin utterly
desolate; scourge; lay waste to; ravage; waste.- The enemy lay waste to the countryside after the invasion
- verb overwhelm or overpower
- He was devastated by his grief when his son died
- More ‘devastate’ Meaning
- devastates Associated Words
- devastates Related Words
- verb cause extensive destruction or ruin utterly
-
gestate
- verb have the idea for
conceive; conceptualize; conceptualise.- He conceived of a robot that would help paralyzed patients
- This library was well conceived
- verb be pregnant with
carry; have a bun in the oven; bear; expect.- She is bearing his child
- The are expecting another child in January
- I am carrying his child
- More ‘gestate’ Meaning
- gestated Associated Words
- gestated Related Words
- verb have the idea for
-
gestate
- verb have the idea for
conceive; conceptualize; conceptualise.- He conceived of a robot that would help paralyzed patients
- This library was well conceived
- verb be pregnant with
carry; have a bun in the oven; bear; expect.- She is bearing his child
- The are expecting another child in January
- I am carrying his child
- More ‘gestate’ Meaning
- gestates Associated Words
- gestates Related Words
- verb have the idea for
-
overstatement
- noun making to seem more important than it really is
magnification; exaggeration.
- More ‘overstatement’ Meaning
- overstatements Associated Words
- overstatements Related Words
- noun making to seem more important than it really is
-
thermostat
- noun a regulator for automatically regulating temperature by starting or stopping the supply of heat
thermoregulator. - verb control the temperature with a thermostat
- More ‘thermostat’ Meaning
- thermostated Related Words
- noun a regulator for automatically regulating temperature by starting or stopping the supply of heat
-
prostatectomy
- noun surgical removal of part or all of the prostate gland
- More ‘prostatectomy’ Meaning
- prostatectomies Associated Words
- prostatectomies Related Words
-
prostate
- noun a firm partly muscular chestnut sized gland in males at the neck of the urethra; produces a viscid secretion that is the fluid part of semen
prostate gland. - adjective relating to the prostate gland
prostatic.
- More ‘prostate’ Meaning
- prostates Associated Words
- prostates Prefix/Suffix Words
- prostates Related Words
- noun a firm partly muscular chestnut sized gland in males at the neck of the urethra; produces a viscid secretion that is the fluid part of semen
-
intestate
- adjective having made no legally valid will before death or not disposed of by a legal will
- he died intestate
- intestate property
- More ‘intestate’ Meaning
- intestates Related Words
- adjective having made no legally valid will before death or not disposed of by a legal will
About Prefix and Suffix Words
This page lists all the words created by adding prefixes, suffixes to the word `state`. For each word, youwill notice a blue bar below the word. The longer the blue bar below a word, the more common/popular the word. Very short blue bars indicate rare usage.
While some of the words are direct derivations of the word `state`, some are not.
You can click on each word to see it’s meaning.
About Prefix and Suffix Words
This page lists all the words created by adding prefixes, suffixes to the word `state`. For each word, youwill notice a blue bar below the word. The longer the blue bar below a word, the more common/popular the word. Very short blue bars indicate rare usage.
While some of the words are direct derivations of the word `state`, some are not.
You can click on each word to see it’s meaning.
A
state is an organised political community, living under a government.
States
may be sovereign in that they enjoy a monopoly of the use of force
and are not dependent on, or subject to any other power or state.
Many states are federated states which participate in a federal
union.
Some
states are subject to external sovereignty or hegemony where ultimate
sovereignty lies in another state.
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 cohesiveness 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 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 was
the state.
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 gives rise to the absolutist
state.
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 «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.
Today,
most Western states more or less fit the influential definition of
the state in Max Weber’s Politics as a Vocation.
According
to Weber, the modern state monopolizes the means of legitimate
physical violence over a well-defined territory. Moreover, the
legitimacy of this monopoly itself is of a very special kind,
«rational-legal» legitimacy, based on impersonal rules that
constrain the power of state elites.
There
are different theories of origin of the state:
-
In
theological
theory
the state origin is explained by God`s Will (Christianity, islam) -
According
to patriarchal
theory,
where state originates from family and the absolute power of monarch
is the continuation of the power of father in family (Aristotle) -
Contract
theory
claims that state appeared as the result of contract between people
(Hobbes) -
Psychological
theory
explains the genesis of state by the inner psychological need for
subjection, submission (Freizer) -
Marxist
theory
holds that the origin of state is the result of society’s division
into classes and social groups.
The
state as a political organization – is a social organism that is
called to protects interests of the people`s of defined territory and
to regulate their relations with the help of law norms and
institutions.
The
attributes
of
the state:
1)
Public power separated from the majority of people;
2)
Tax system (taxation)
3)
Fixed territory
The
attributes of the state are also: officials, army, police, supreme
Court, public prosecutor`s office, secret service, prison etc;
The
state has a lot of functions. There are internal and external
functions of the state.
The
Internal
functions
are:
-
Economical
-
Humanitarian
-
Social
-
National
and integrative -
Law
enforcement (i.e. disobedience to law is persecuted) -
Cultural
and educational -
Scientific
The
External
functions
are:
-
Diplomatic
-
Military
-
Protective
The
form of government
refers to the set of political institutions by which a government of
a state is organized in order to exert its powers over a house in the
congress body politic. Synonyms include «regime type» and
«system of government».The main forms are monarchy and
republic.
A
republic
is
a form of government in which the people retain supreme control over
the government, and in which the head of government is not a monarch.
The
word «republic» is derived from the Latin phrase res
publica, which can be translated as «a public affair». In
the early 21st century, most states that are not monarchies label
themselves as republics either in their official names or their
constitutions. Here is a list of variations on the term «republic»:
Parliamentary
republic
— a republic, like India, Bangladesh, with an elected Head of
state, but where the Head of state and Head of government are kept
separate with the Head of government retaining most executive powers,
or a Head of state akin to a Head of government, elected by a
Parliament.
Federal
republic,
confederation or federation — is a federal union of states or
provinces with a republican form of government. Examples include
Argentina, Austria, Brazil, Germany, India, Russia, the United
States, and Switzerland.