|
|
Cambiar vista de pantalla: Jason Sorens April 4, 2011 | Roatán Honduras | Duración:..
| | You need to upgrade your Flash Player version to 9.3 or superior. To update please click here. Loading... | Get the Flash Player to see this player. |
Share
Copy and paste this link to an email or instant message
[Hide]
Right click this link and add to bookmarks:
| |
About this video
About the author
Many intellectuals have agreed that the governments have managed to legally monopolize violence, and every political system has struggled to maintain and secure its power and influence over the citizens. Jason Sorens explains the process of secession, describing it as the withdrawal of a territory from the sovereignty of an existing state, and how this relates to the creation of free cities around the world. He also describes the secession cases that have occurred in history and makes a realistic approach on the relationship that every society has developed with its central authority. By following certain ideas, he exposes and demonstrates how the process of secession may help free societies emerge and evade centralism at its most.
Credits
Secession as a Continuum Jason Sorens
Roatán, Honduras Honduras, April 4, 2011
A New Media - UFM production. Guatemala, April 2011 Camera: Mario Estrada; digital editing: Claudia de Obregón; index and synopsis: Sergio Bustamante; content reviser: Sofía Díaz; publication: Claudia de Obregón, Sofía Díaz
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons 3.0 License
Este trabajo ha sido registrado con una licencia Creative Commons 3.0
Jason Sorens is assistant professor of political science at the University at Buffalo, SUNY. His areas of interest include secession, federalism, ethnic conflict, and the political economy of American states. He is founder of the Free State Project and author of the book Secessionism: Identity, Interest, and Strategy. Sorens holds a PhD from Yale University.
Source: www.ufm.edu Last update: 06/04/2011
 Content
 | Initial credits |
 | Introduction |
 | Conference outline |
 | Forms of territorial autonomy
|
 | Centralized system |
 | Independent system |
 | Objectives of free cities |
 | Independent system |
 | Hypothetical examples of secession and decentralization
|
 | Relatively centralized state |
 | Regional voter status quo |
 | Credibility of secession |
 | Federalist view |
 | Viability of secession
|
 | Central government compromise to secession |
 | Signs of weakness |
 | Power of autonomy |
 | Equanimity about breakup |
 | Induced decentralization by secessionism |
 | Political conditions for decentralization
|
 | Credible commitment by regional government |
 | Credible commitment by central government
|
 | Feasibility of seasteading |
 | Legal path to secession |
 | Lack of political power |
 | Pitfalls of decentralization
|
 | Veto power |
 | Regional funding by central government |
 | Final thoughts for a secession strategy |
 | Final credits |
|
|