The Sovereign Enclosure of Life: Causes, Consequences, and Cures of the Nation-State. A Life-Coherent Diagnosis of Sovereignty, Borders, War, Identity, and Political Repair

The nation-state is often treated as the natural and necessary container of political life. Yet it is a historically contingent human creation: a political technology that fused territory, peoplehood, law, coercion, extraction, memory, and belonging into a single sovereign form. This fusion enabled large-scale public goods, rights, infrastructure, public health, education, and collective protection. But it also produced recurring life-harms: war, border violence, colonial enclosure, identity exclusion, ecological abstraction, developmental sacrifice, and institutional denial.

This paper develops a life-coherent diagnosis of the nation-state. It argues that the core pathology is not collective governance itself, but sovereign enclosure: the elevation of the symbolic body of the nation above the living bodies, communities, ecosystems, and future generations it is supposed to serve. The nation-state becomes a life-harm machine when sovereign self-maintenance overrides life-correction.

The paper traces the causes of this political form through war-making, coercive extraction, industrial standardization, administrative legibility, the ideology of sovereignty, and colonial cartography. It then examines the consequences of bordered moral perception, legalized violence, identity enclosure, ecological abstraction, developmental sacrifice, and epistemic closure. Finally, it proposes cures: conditional sovereignty, civil commons constitutionalism, bioregional nesting, plural belonging, demilitarized security, transnational life-accountability, and participatory repair.

The aim is not to romanticize statelessness or deny the life-protective capacities of public institutions. It is to re-nest political authority within the conditions of life.

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