Political Science

4.4 Weak States, Failed States, and Challenges to Authority

A state is supposed to govern a territory and population. The state should be able to make laws, enforce laws, control borders, collect taxes, maintain order, protect citizens, provide basic services, and represent the country in international affairs. When a state can do these things effectively, it is usually considered a strong state. When a state struggles to do these things, it may be considered a weak state. When a state breaks down so badly that it can no longer maintain basic order, enforce law, or control its own territory, it may be described as a failed state.

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4.1 What Is the State?

A state is one of the most important concepts in political science. People often use the words state, government, nation, and country as if they all mean the same thing. In political science, these words are related, but they do not mean exactly the same thing. A state is a political organization that claims authority over a specific territory and population. It has institutions, laws, leaders, courts, police, military forces, and administrative systems that allow it to govern.

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4.0 Political Science Module 4: The State, Sovereignty, and Legitimacy

Module 4 explains the concepts of the state, sovereignty, and legitimacy, and shows why they are central to understanding political power. It defines the state as the larger political structure that governs a territory and population through institutions such as laws, courts, police, and military forces, while distinguishing it from the government, which is only the group currently running the state. The module also explains sovereignty as final authority, both inside a state and in relation to outside powers, and legitimacy as the belief that a government’s rule is rightful and should be accepted.

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3.10 Modern Structural Theories of Power

A structural theory of power looks beyond individual choices and asks how systems shape people’s lives. Marxism focused especially on economics, class, ownership, and labor. Later structural theories applied similar kinds of analysis to other areas of society. For example, elite theory studies how small groups of powerful people can dominate politics, business, media, and institutions.

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3.8 Socialism, State Socialism, and Communism

The words socialism, state socialism, and communism are sometimes used as if they mean the same thing. Although they are related, they refer to different ideas. Socialism is the broadest term. It is the idea that the means of production (land, factories, machines, businesses, technology, and resources used to produce goods and wealth) should be owned or controlled socially rather than privately by a small capitalist class.

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3.7 Class, Alienation, and the Conflict Between Owners and Workers

For Marx, the central conflict in capitalism is the conflict between owners and workers. Marx described this as the struggle between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat. The bourgeoisie are the capitalist class who own the means of production: factories, land, machines, businesses, tools, technology, and capital. The proletariat are the working class who do not own the means of production and must sell their labor in order to survive.

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