Nation vs. Religion vs. State.

AuthorHowell, Llewellyn D.
PositionWORLD WATCHER

IN 1964, POLITICAL SCIENTIST Ernst B. Haas wrote Beyond the Nation-State, contending that the nation-state system was dysfunctional and should be replaced. Just on the back end of the European colonialist system, Haas was proposing movement to a means of governance that would merge human societies and eliminate the competitive elements of rule that lead to conflict.

There has been little but retrogression since. The hopeful thinking of Beyond the Nation-State was composed on the eve of the Vietnam conflict and the most threatening days of the Cold War. The demise of the Soviet Union 25 years later only exacerbated the division of human society into more numerous, absolutist, and competitive pieces of political terrain, ensuring more opportunities for conflict and, indeed, more conflict. Today, the promise is for a mirrored shadow of Haas' prospective political order. In Turkey, Sudan, Russia, Lebanon, Iraq, and many other hot spots, devolution of the governance systems is underway.

We understand what is going on about us by dealing with it linguistically. Phenomena do not exist until we give them names. Political entities--which exist to establish and maintain harmony within the group and to protect it against outsiders, among other purposes--have had various names in every language over time. These entities have been the family, tribes, nations, religions, states, and, potentially, regional and global organizations. They are the sources of rifles and laws and are the a basis of enforcement.

However, political science has been remiss in keeping up with the terminology and its meanings; the language we use in political discourse is out of date and misleading. If it were not, we would better understand the directional shift away from the unity of purpose and organization that Haas sought toward the chaos that political philosopher Thomas Hobbes feared.

To get a grip on our fate, we need to address something of this vocabulary and the associated human history. In prehistoric times, the blood-related family was the unit of organization. Tribes arose out of the need of families to derive mates from different bloodlines and to do so without stealing them. Nations grew from economic necessity when tribes required control and guidance in commercial transactions across tribal domains and functions. Think of it in terms of the Iroquois Nation in New York and Ontario. They are one people, homogenous in ethnicity, culture, and language, and still rule...

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