the subjectivity of state legitimacy ahmed siddiqi, department of political science, department of...

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The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Mentor: Dr. Ruderman, Department of Political Science, College of Arts and Sciences

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Page 1: The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Mentor:

The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy

Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences

Faculty Mentor: Dr. Ruderman, Department of Political Science, College of Arts and Sciences

Page 2: The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Mentor:

Definition of the State

•“...a state is a human community that (successfully) claims the monopoly of the legitimate use of physical force within a given territory.”

• Max Weber, “Politics as a Vocation”

Page 3: The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Mentor:

Strategies of Legitimization

•Consent of the governed

•Libertarian minarchism based on an objective ethical code

•Utilitarianism based on the state’s unique position to reduce harm

Page 4: The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Mentor:

Unanimous Direct Democracy

•Every decision enjoys universal agreement.

•Assumes lack of logistical impediments.

•Assumes perfect similarity of opinion.

Page 5: The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Mentor:

Universal Consent

•Every decision is made by a body that was formed upon universal agreement.

•Relaxes logistical assumptions.

•Assumes perfect agreement to enter into political society.

Page 6: The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Mentor:

Universal Consent•“The only way whereby any one

devests himself of his Natural Liberty, and put on the bounds of Civil Society is by agreeing with other Men to joyn and unite into a Community, for their comfortable, safe, and peacable living one amongst another, in a secure Enjoyment of their Properties, and a greater Security against any that are not of it.”

• John Locke, Second Treatise of Government

Page 7: The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Mentor:

Inapplicability to Modern States

•States have full authority within a given territory.

•Dissidents are forced to accept the legal framework of the state, or leave its borders.

•Convenience vs. legitimacy

Page 8: The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Mentor:

Libertarian Minarchism

•"...a minimal state, limited to the narrow functions of protection against force, theft, fraud, enforcement of contracts, and so on, is justified... any more extensive state will violate persons' rights not to be forced to do certain things, and is unjustified.”

• Robert Nozick, Anarchy, State, and Utopia

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Page 14: The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Mentor:

Utilitarianism

• “The good and happiness of the members, that is the majority of the members of the state, is the great standard by which every thing relating to that state must finally be determined.”

• Joseph Priestley, The First Principles of Government and Liberty

Page 15: The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Mentor:

Utilitarianism of Form

•A society in which the majority rule is, on utilitarian grounds, necessarily preferable to a society in which rule is restricted to a minority.

•Fallacious, since imposing upon fewer people is not the same as imposing less in total.

Page 16: The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Mentor:

Utilitarianism of Policy

Page 17: The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Mentor:
Page 18: The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Mentor:

Utilitarian Subjectivity•The libertarian paradigm attempts to

establish an objective ethical code.

•A state based upon such a premise could legitimately expand its borders indefinitely.

•The utilitarian paradigm only presumes to minimize costs with respect to a certain community.

•The utilitarian state has no has no legitimate basis upon which to force individuals to recognize its authority.

Page 19: The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Mentor:

Recapitulation•The state, claiming a monopoly on

the legitimate use of violence within a given territory, effects those who do not consent to its rule.

•To restrict state action, on the basis that it is coercive, is to allow harmful variables to settle at levels higher than they would otherwise be.

•A utilitarian state cannot legitimately force anyone to recognize its authority.

Page 20: The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Mentor:

Conclusion

•Whatever its form and policies, the state is necessarily the mechanism through which the will of the powerful is imposed upon society at large.

Page 21: The Subjectivity of State Legitimacy Ahmed Siddiqi, Department of Political Science, Department of Economics, College of Arts and Sciences Faculty Mentor:

Reference List• John Locke. Two Treatises of Government. Unknown:

Bnpublishing.Com, 2007.

• Nozick, Robert. Anarchy, State and Utopia. New York: Basic Books, 1974.

• Priestley, Joseph. Essay of the First Principles of Government and on the Nature of Political, Civil and Religious Liberty. New York: Kessinger Publishing, 2003.

• Weber, Max. Politics as a vocation (Facet books : Social ethics series). Minneapolis: Fortress Press,

1972.