We explain what the State is and the capabilities it must have. Furthermore, its elements and the differences it has with a government.
What is the State?
It is understood by State (usually with capital letters) the human organization that encompasses the entire population of a countrystructured socially, politically and economically through a set of independent and sovereign institutions that regulate life in society.
In other words, a State is equivalent to the set of powers and public bodies that constitute the sovereign government of a nation, and Sometimes the term is also used to refer to the nation as a whole.: the Argentine State, the Palestinian State, etc. For an organized human collective to be recognized as a State, it must have certain conditions, but also international recognition from its peers.
All States, then, must be able to have the capacity to:
- Externalize your power. That is, achieve the recognition of their peers by force if necessary.
- Institutionalize your power. This means having coercive institutions that maintain order and consolidate the methods of succession in political power, whatever they may be.
- Manage a collective identity. The inhabitants of a State must feel part of an organized whole greater than their own individuals or families, and must share a tradition, a founding story, a series of national symbols, etc.
See also: Constitutional law
Elements of the State
The elements common to every State are:
- Population. No State exists without a population that comprises it, no matter how large or small it may be, or however diverse it may be in cultural, racial or linguistic matters. In fact, there are many plurinational States (several nations organized in the same State), since the important thing is that the inhabitants agree to be governed by the same institutions and share a similar political destiny.
- Territory. All States have a territory and borders that delimit their area of sovereignty and exercise of law from that of neighboring States. Said territory is yours to administer, cede, protect or economically exploit in the way you see fit, as long as it does not put neighboring territories in check.
- Government. Every State must have firm and lasting institutions to manage life in society, as well as authorities to govern them and sovereign methods to decide who will exercise said authority in its territory. Said government will exercise the politics and administration of the State for a defined time based on the legal, cultural and political rules of the population.
- Sovereignty. No State exists if another makes its decisions for it, so every state requires autonomy and strength to exercise and defend its decisions. If we do not possess it, we may be faced with a colony, an associated State or other forms of domination of one State over another.
rule of law
The rule of law is called a particular system of a countryin which all types of conflict and social, legal or political procedure are resolved according to what is explained in a Magna Carta, that is, a Constitution.
The Constitution contemplates the rules of the game for the functioning of a particular State, including the powers and limitations of the forces of the State, the rights and obligations of citizens, and therefore all those who live in said country must voluntarily submit to the law enshrined in said text.
It is an essential condition for the existence of a rule of law that all citizens are equal before the law, enjoy the same rights and duties, are legally evaluated with the same scale and that institutions operate in accordance with the law.
Nation and government
Terms such as State, nation and government are often confused. The distinction between a State, as we have defined it in this article, and a nation or a government lies in:
- Governments are administrations of the resources and institutions of the State, which vary according to the political and legal rules of a country, and which then give way to other political actors to exercise their own government, without this normally implying drastic changes in the structure of the state. Governments pass and are constituted by an elected or dominant political class; States, on the other hand, are durable and cover the entire population of a country. The sum of all public assets is therefore equivalent to the State, not the government.
- Nations, for their part, are groups of people who share historical, cultural, sometimes ethnic, usually linguistic ties, and who recognize themselves as a collectivity, whether or not they have their own State to administer. The concept of nation is similar to that of “people”: in the same State, various nations or peoples can exist, as is the case of the Plurinational State of Bolivia, made up of a mixed population of various ethnic groups or indigenous nations.
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