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Statehood and The International Order

Foreign Policy
International Relations
Political Theory
Broadcast
Communication
Member States
PRA460
Klejda Mulaj
University of Exeter
Klejda Mulaj
University of Exeter

Building: C - Hollar, Floor: 2, Room: 115

Thursday 16:00 - 17:45 CEST (07/09/2023)

Abstract

Although the international system is based on states and statehood being in the center of many considerations, sovereignty, statehood, legitimacy, and recognition are all in themselves and in their interplay highly contested. This not only becomes clear by focusing on events and debates at the time of the Russian Empire and the Establishment of the Soviet Union but is true for a diverse set of actors over time. Thereby, the practice of (non-)recognition, which is often discussed while focusing on (contested) states, de facto states, quasi-states or unrecognised entities, is not limited to such entities but becomes more relevant for non-states actors too. With this being particularly true in times of growing digitalisation and globalised technology, the traditional perspective on recognition is challenged. This leads to increasing complexity in the debates concerning the legitimacy and recognition of different kinds of actors, including governments, while addressing the overarching question of “What makes a state a state?” While considering the material and non-material power of different kinds of actors, this panel not only includes perspectives from International Law, Political Theory, History, and other disciplines but combines different methodological approaches. Furthermore, it refers to various empirical examples like Taiwan, Estonia, Kosovo, Afghanistan, Russia and various non-state actors from other fields. It follows the debate about new types of autocracy and includes recent events and developments in Russia. While empirically covering a period of a little over 100 years, this panel combines various empirical cases and perspectives to draw a complex picture of recent and ongoing debates concerning statehood, the international order and perspectives resulting from recent changes in the empirical reality and scholarly debates.

Title Details
‘There is no Russia’: Self-determination and State Recognition during the Russian Revolution and Civil War, 1917-1922 View Paper Details
Recognition and Legitimacy of the Taliban Government in Afghanistan View Paper Details
From Informational Autocracy to Violent Autocracy View Paper Details
When Netflix recognises (contested) states: How non-state actors are transforming the practice of state recognition in the digital landscape View Paper Details
The Long Arm and the Iron Fist: Authoritarian Crackdowns and Transnational Repression View Paper Details