Sovereigntism

Sovereigntism, sovereignism or souverainism (from French: souverainisme, pronounced [su.vʁɛ.nism] , meaning the ideology of sovereignty) is the notion of having control over one's conditions of existence, whether at the level of the self, social group, region, nation or globe.[1] Typically used for describing the acquiring or preserving political independence of a nation or a region, a sovereigntist aims to "take back control" from perceived powerful forces,[2] either against internal subversive minority groups (ethnic, sexual or gender),[3] or from external global governance institutions,[4] federalism and supranational unions. It generally leans instead toward isolationism, and can be associated with certain independence movements, but has also been used to justify violating the independence of other nations.[5][6]

Classification

Sovereigntism has a cultural as well as political component and can take the form of hostility towards outsiders having different values or different countries or regions of origin.[7] Sovereigntist groups are associated with populism since they typically claim legitimacy for carrying out the sovereign will of the people.[8] While leftist sovereigntists tend to think of their national border as a defensive line against the corrosive effects of neo-liberal economics, right wing sovereigntists see it more as a filter protecting the sovereign people from undesired new members.[9]

Though there are wide differences in ideology and historical context between sovereigntist movements, those of the twenty first century can be thought of as belonging to three separate categories: conservative sovereigntism, archeo-sovereigntism, and neo-sovereigntism.[10] Conservative sovereignism embraces the national Westphalian model of sovereignty seeking to preserve the interstate order with norms promoting global economic order but halting further advances towards political integration. Some vestiges of colonialism remain, with old powers retaining what they see as historical special responsibilities to intervene in former possessions, such as in the case of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Amongst rising powers, neo-sovereigntism is concerned with issues of autonomism, especially against more privileged nations with concentrated power in transnational entities such as the UN security council or G7. It seeks to strengthen norms and agreements protecting the independence of each state, granting their equality, and restraining more powerful states from attempts to influence the behavior of other nations. Archeo-sovereigntism is the most radical, rejecting forces of globalization and restraints on states by transnational bodies, norms and agreements, calling for a return to a pre- World War II order when states were freer from such interference.[6] Examples in Europe include the Front National in France, the Lega Nord in Italy, the Dansk Folk Party in Denmark, and the UKIP in the UK.

In a paper published in the European Review of International Studies outlining these three major tendencies, researchers Alles and Badie summarised them thus:[11]

Three coexisting types of sovereigntism in the post-bipolar context
Contemporary types of sovereigntism Conception of sovereignty Claim Protest Approach of globalisation
Neo-sovereigntism Self-affirmation Equality Hierarchy Example
Archeo sovereigntism Specificity Identity Globalisation Antagonist
Conservative sovereigntism Normative Hierarchy Emergence of challengers Selective

Europe

In Europe, sovereigntist political movements divide (on the one hand) between those that seek to leave the European Union completely (or oppose joining it) and (on the other), those who aim for a "Europe of the nations", a less integrated Europe respecting the individual characteristics and sovereignty of constituent states.[12] Supporters of these doctrines tend to regard themselves as Euro-realists opposed to the Euro-federalists and call for a more confederal version of a European Union. (The European Union is not a federation but shares many characteristics of one.) Thus, sovereigntism in Europe is opposed to federalism and typically involves nationalism, particularly in the United Kingdom (which withdrew from the EU in 2020) and in France where parties on the left and right margins lean strongly towards it.

France

The souverainiste doctrine is particularly influential in France, where numerous political movements adhere to it:

Germany

Parties with tendencies that could be described also as sovereigntist can be also found in Germany:

Greece

Parties with tendencies that could be described also as sovereigntists can also be found in Greece:

Hungary

Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and his Fidesz party, in power since 2010, have increasingly followed a sovereigntist policy against the European Union. On December 12, 2023, the Hungarian National Assembly adopted the Sovereignty Protection Act, which creates a new government agency, called the Sovereignty Protection Office, to be established by February 1, 2024. It will have broad powers to investigate alleged attacks on Hungarian sovereignty, including the activities of civic organizations supported from abroad.

Italy

Parties with tendencies that could be described also as sovereigntist can be also found in Italy:

Romania

Parties with tendencies that could be described also as sovereigntist can be also found in Romania:

Russia

Since 2006, Vladimir Putin has espoused the current Russian sovereigntist view of a political, economic, and cultural battle between sovereign peoples of Russia on one side, and on the other- transnational institutions with their neoliberal and cosmopolitan ideologies undermining Russia's sovereignty and cultural existence. In Putinism, the "national wealth" of the multiethnic Russian peoples (its morality, values, memory of its forefathers and its culture) both defines and is protected by its sovereignty. Putin advisor Vladislav Surkov articulated the threat to "sovereign democracy" posed by international organizations serving the interest of NATO, the OSCE, and the unipolar world order controlled by the United States. According to the ideology of Putinism, Georgian and Ukrainian sovereignty could not be respected since it had already been lost due to their color revolutions, seen as a collapse of borders protecting them from being engulfed culturally, economically and politically by Europe and the West.[13] As a cultural and political protector against threatening Western powers, the idea of a sovereign union of multiple peoples under Russia's leadership has been employed as a legitimation theory for imperial expansion. This usage predates the Soviet Union, tracing back to Pan-slavism’s origins in the 16th century, later becoming integrated with Russian nationalism, imperialism and Orthodox messianism in the 19th century.[14][15][16]

Serbia

Parties with tendencies that could be described also as sovereigntist can be also found in Serbia:

Spain

Parties with tendencies that could be described also as sovereigntist can be also found in Spain:

Catalonia

In the Parliament of Catalonia, parties explicitly supporting independence from Spain are Together for Catalonia (JxCat) (which includes Partit Demòcrata Europeu Català (PDeCAT), heir of the former Convergència Democràtica de Catalunya (CDC)); Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya (ERC), and Candidatura d'Unitat Popular (CUP).

United Kingdom

Parties with policies that could be described as sovereigntist can be also found in United Kingdom; notably by the Johnson-led Conservative Party (UK) (that chose a hard Brexit), the Scottish National Party and Plaid Cymru (Party of Wales), and Sinn Féin in Northern Ireland.[citation needed]

North America

Canada

In the Canadian province of Quebec, souverainisme or sovereigntism refers to the Quebec sovereignty movement, which argues for Quebec to separate from Canada and become its own nation. Many leaders in the movement, notably René Lévesque, have preferred the terms "sovereignty" and "sovereigntist" over other common names such as separatist or independentist, although this terminology may be objected to by opponents.

Quebec

United States

Coupled with its history of isolationism and sense of American exceptionalism, US sovereigntism is largely a conservative perspective, celebrating both American self-definition and liberty to engage in unilateral action.[17] Sovereigntism in foreign policy is charactized by opposition to multilateral regimes relating to climate change, war crimes, arms control and international declaration of human rights.[18]

The dominant US sovereigntist perspective is currently that of Trumpism[19][20] and has three dimensions:[21]

  • World order and peace is best secured by sovereign states looking after themselves, as opposed to rules based international order of interdependent and integrated countries.
  • The needs of the American people come first before any other concern of government. Any other prioritization violates the sovereignty of the people.
  • Sovereigntism is used partisan weapon, where anyone who differs with Trumpian formulations of sovereignty are identified as political enemies.

A more extreme conservative view of popular sovereignty involves a radical unwinding of centralized government and an expansion of regional sovereignty, where freedoms are controlled at the local level, not adjudicated at the federal level. From the perspective of the tea party and continuing among followers of Trumpism, the populist concept of the sovereign people refers exclusively to a specifically defined Christian community that "invites people of different backgrounds to unite under a common 'American' sense of self". Similar to the perspective of Putinism, those individuals who maintain a separate minority identity are not only excluded, but are regarded as a threat to the majority's sovereignty, especially when they seek legal redress for violation of their human rights as defined by constitutional and international norms. [22]

See also

References

  • Alles, Delphine; Badie, Bertrand (2016). "Sovereigntism in the International System: From Change to Split" (PDF). European Review of International Studies. 3 (2): 16–18. doi:10.3224/eris.v3i1.26004.

Minakov, Mikhail (2022). "Sovereignty as a Contested Concept: The Cases of Trumpism and Putinism". Inventing Majorities: Ideological Creativity in Post-Soviet Societies. Stuttgart: ibidem-Verlag. ISBN 9783838216416.

  1. ^ Friedman, Jonathan (2018). "A note on populism and global systemic crisis". Economic Anthropology. 5 (5): 136. doi:10.1002/sea2.12108. Retrieved 2022-07-01.
  2. ^ Kallis 2018, p. 3.
  3. ^ Minakov (2022), p. 307.
  4. ^ Benhabib, Seyla (2016). "The new sovereigntism and transnational law: Legal utopianism, democratic scepticism and statist realism". Global Constitutionalism. 5 (1). Cambridge University Press: 109. doi:10.1017/S2045381716000010. S2CID 155699112.
  5. ^ Minakov (2022), p. 299.
  6. ^ a b Alles & Badie (2016), p. 16.
  7. ^ Azmanova, Albena (2022). "Populism and the Recasting of the Ideological Landscape of Liberal Democracies". In Oswald, Michael (ed.). The Palgrave Handbook of Populism (e-book ed.). Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave MacMillan- Springer Nature Switzerland AG. p. 383. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-80803-7. ISBN 9783030808037. S2CID 244164991.
  8. ^ Azmanova 2022, p. 167.
  9. ^ Kallis, Aristotle (2018). "Populism, Sovereigntism, and the Unlikely Re-Emergence of the Territorial Nation-State" (PDF). Fudan Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences. 11 (3): 10,14. doi:10.1007/s40647-018-0233-z. S2CID 158092242.
  10. ^ Minakov (2022), p. 292.
  11. ^ Alles & Badie (2016), p. 18.
  12. ^ De Spiegeleire, Stephan; Skinner, Clarissa; Sweijs, Tim; Novak, Ekaterina (2017). "Executive summary". The Rise of Populist Sovereignism: What It Is, Where It Comes from, and What It Means for International Security and Defense. Hague Centre for Strategic Studies. pp. ii–xvi. JSTOR resrep12603.3. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  13. ^ Minakov (2022), p. 306-307.
  14. ^ Suslov, Mikhail (2013-05-15). "Geographical Metanarratives in Russia and the European East: Contemporary Pan-Slavism". Eurasian Geography and Economics. 53 (5): 575–595. doi:10.2747/1539-7216.53.5.575. S2CID 155015782. Retrieved 2022-06-29.
  15. ^ Van Herpen, Marcel H. (2014). Putin's Wars: The Rise of Russia's New Imperialism (e-book ed.). Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 37–38. ISBN 9781442231382.
  16. ^ Van Herpen, Marcel H. (2014). Putin's Wars: The Rise of Russia's New Imperialism. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 35–43. ISBN 978-1-4422-3138-2.
  17. ^ Resnick, Judith. "Law as Affiliation: Foreign Law, Democratic Federalism, and the Sovereigntism of the Nation-State". International Journal of Constitutional Law. 6 (1): 34–35. Retrieved 2022-07-01.
  18. ^ Spiro, Peter J. (2000). "The New Sovereigntists: American Exceptionalism and Its False Prophets". Foreign Affairs. 79 (6): 9–15. doi:10.2307/20049963. JSTOR 20049963.
  19. ^ Minakov (2022), p. 297.
  20. ^ Ash, Timothy Garton (2018-09-28). "It's not just Trump. Much of America has turned its back on Europe". The Guardian. Retrieved 2022-07-02.
  21. ^ Ettinger, Aaron (2020). "Principled realism and populist sovereignty in Trump's foreign policy". Cambridge Review of International Affairs. 33 (3): 410–431. doi:10.1080/09557571.2019.1659229. S2CID 203085341.
  22. ^ Minakov (2022), pp. 295–296, 305.
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