Article,

Space, Boundaries, and the Problem of Order: A View from Systems Theory

, and .
International Political Sociology, 1 (3): 240--256 (August 2007)

Abstract

The idea our global polity is chiefly divided by territorially organized nation-states captures contemporary constellations of power and authority only insufficiently. Through a decoupling of power and the state, political spaces no longer match geographical spaces. Instead of simply acknowledging a challenge to the state, there is the need to rethink the changing meaning of space for political processes. The paper identifies three aspects, a reconceptualization of the spatial assumptions that IR needs to address: the production of space, the constitutive role of boundaries, and the problem of order. With this contribution, we argue that one avenue in understanding the production of space and the following questions of order is by converging systems theory and critical geopolitics. While the latter has already developed a conceptual apparatus to analyze the production of space, the former comes with an encompassing theoretical background, which takes 'world society' as the starting point of analysis. In this respect, nation states are understood as a form of internal differentiation of a wider system, namely world society.

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