This article looks at the relationship between logistical power and the assemblages of sites that constitute modern states. Rather than treating states as centralizing institutions and singular sites of power, we treat them as multi-sited. They gain power by using logistical methods of problem solving, using instructures to enforce and depersonalize relations of domination and limit the autonomy of elites. But states necessarily solver diverse problems by different means in multiple locations. So, educating children is not continuous with governing colonies even though both are necessary to nineteenth-century states. For this reason, states use logistical means of coordination to link sites, and they make the power of the state seem unitary...
The essay tackles the intertwining of State and capital as powers that dominate modernity, locating ...
This Article offers an alternate account of federalism’s late eighteenth-century origins. In place o...
textabstractNation-states have become, for better or for worse, the basic units into which humanity ...
This article looks at the relationship between logistical power and the assemblages of sites that co...
Multi-scalar or multi-site power relations offer two contrasting ways of understanding the shifting ...
The exercise of symbolic power has become a privileged focus of scholarship on the state, but withou...
The article contains a brief review of the historical genesis of the state and an analysis of its le...
I propose a concept of effective sovereignty to argue that states participate in sovereignty regimes...
The article analyses the recent historiographical debate ongoing in the United States of America on ...
This article undertakes four tasks. First, I show how and why states have sought to monopolize the "...
This Afterword does not seek to contest Ran Hirschl and Ayelet Shachar’s account of spatial statism....
From Auguste Comte onward, sociology has been a science to diagnose the contemporary human condition...
Our Article proceeds in three principal parts. In Part I, we explore the extent to which the State c...
98 pagesIn the modern world, sovereignty provides the conceptual framework enabling states to intera...
State is society’s need for the existence of an organized power, equipped with the right equipments ...
The essay tackles the intertwining of State and capital as powers that dominate modernity, locating ...
This Article offers an alternate account of federalism’s late eighteenth-century origins. In place o...
textabstractNation-states have become, for better or for worse, the basic units into which humanity ...
This article looks at the relationship between logistical power and the assemblages of sites that co...
Multi-scalar or multi-site power relations offer two contrasting ways of understanding the shifting ...
The exercise of symbolic power has become a privileged focus of scholarship on the state, but withou...
The article contains a brief review of the historical genesis of the state and an analysis of its le...
I propose a concept of effective sovereignty to argue that states participate in sovereignty regimes...
The article analyses the recent historiographical debate ongoing in the United States of America on ...
This article undertakes four tasks. First, I show how and why states have sought to monopolize the "...
This Afterword does not seek to contest Ran Hirschl and Ayelet Shachar’s account of spatial statism....
From Auguste Comte onward, sociology has been a science to diagnose the contemporary human condition...
Our Article proceeds in three principal parts. In Part I, we explore the extent to which the State c...
98 pagesIn the modern world, sovereignty provides the conceptual framework enabling states to intera...
State is society’s need for the existence of an organized power, equipped with the right equipments ...
The essay tackles the intertwining of State and capital as powers that dominate modernity, locating ...
This Article offers an alternate account of federalism’s late eighteenth-century origins. In place o...
textabstractNation-states have become, for better or for worse, the basic units into which humanity ...