state elements

Society

2022

We explain what and what are the elements of the State, the characteristics of each one and why they are important.

Not every human community can be considered a state.

What are the elements of the State?

In legal theory it is understood by elements of the Condition or constitutive elements of the State to the set of factors that traditionally must be present for a State to exist, that is, to are the factors that allow the existence of a State.

Going to the basics, a State is a political institution created to guarantee the satisfaction of the collective needs of Justice, organization and leadership, through an imposed legal order, that is, a law. For this to be possible, certain fundamental conditions must be fulfilled, since not all community human is equivalent to a state.

The classification of these elements often varies in political and legal studies, but fundamentally they are reduced to three:

  • The population. There are no states without populations, that is, without citizens own, whether children, adults or the elderly. East sense of belonging and identification is key to the existence of the State, because from this, nationals can be distinguished from foreigners, their own and those of others. Often in specialized language the state is distinguished (the institutions and laws) of the people and their culture (the nation).
  • The territory. For a State to exist, it must have its own territory to administer, that is, a portion of the planet's surface that belongs to it and is under its absolute control, where the majority of its population resides. This territory is delimited by the country's borders, which separate its territory from that of its neighbors, and within which the only valid law is the law of the State. The waters that cross it (rivers, lakes, lagoons and seas to some extent) and natural resources of all kinds that are present in it.
  • The can wave sovereignty. Finally, a State does not exist if it is not sovereign, that is, if it does not have the authority to administer its territory at will, and if it does not have the institutions to independently and freely exercise its roles of justice, leadership and organization. social and political. The sovereignty of States is, in principle, inviolable, and any interference by external powers can be considered a reason for the war; reason for which international conflicts are settled according to international laws and institutions by mutual agreement between nations. In other words, there are no States without government, without institutions and without political power in their hands.
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