Thomas Prescott

Dernière sortie

Nations Without Borders: A History of Stateless Peoples

"States rise and fall. Borders move. But nations without states endure-quietly, persistently, and against expectation." The modern world assumes that nations and states are identical, yet history proves otherwise. In Nations Without Borders, Thomas Prescott provides a calm, analytical, and non-sentimental re-examination of human groups that persist without formal sovereignty. From the fluid loyalties of pre-modern kinship to the institutionalized limbo of today's "de facto states, " this book reveals that identity and political consciousness have never required a seat at the UN to survive.
Moving with the structural clarity of Imagined Communities and the geopolitical realism of Against the Grain, Prescott explores how the very invention of the modern state created "statelessness" as a structural outcome. He investigates the "Violence of Classification"-how census categories and standardized languages began to erase peoples on paper long before they were excluded by borders. The book explores "Governance Without Sovereignty, " detailing how councils, elders, and shared memory substitute for institutions, allowing nations to survive through strategic flexibility rather than direct confrontation with the state's monopoly on power.
Nations Without Borders is a vital roadmap for a world where the international system remains blind to any group without a flag. Prescott argues that the state is an administrative overlay that can fail far more easily than the social network of a nation. In an era of increasing fragmentation and ethnic sorting, he analyzes why the modern order creates more stateless nations than it can ever resolve.
This is an essential inquiry for anyone ready to look past the map and understand the enduring human networks that borders couldn't erase.
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Les livres de Thomas Prescott