An aspirant state is a polity which seeks to achieve international recognition as a sovereign state. This can involve separatist polities seceding from their parent state with or without legal permission or individuals seeking to establish a novel state in what is considered international territory. Regardless of its founding circumstances, all aspirant states claim sovereignty over their claimed territory and seek formal recognition of their statehood in international society. Such an entity is only considered an aspirant state while it formally claims sovereignty but has not achieved international recognition as a sovereign state. Consequently, an aspirant state could be recognized by no other political entities or many other political entities, its status as an aspirant state or a sovereign state is subjective and there are multiple different theories which seek to delineate what qualifies as statehood.[1][2][3]
Examples of aspirant states can include sovereignty seeking forms of: micronations, aspirant nations, disputed states, quasi-states, and proto-states.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Grant, Thomas (1999). The recognition of states: law and practice in debate and evolution. Praeger. ISBN 0275963500.
- ^ Beasley, Ryan K.; Kaarbo, Juliet (2017-01-09). "Casting for a sovereign role: Socialising an aspirant state in the Scottish independence referendum". European Journal of International Relations. 24 (1): 8–32. doi:10.1177/1354066116683442. hdl:10023/9849. ISSN 1354-0661. S2CID 151674032.
- ^ Mehrabi, Wais (2018-01-01). "Politics of International Recognition: The Case of Aspirant States". Wright State University.