Nation, State & Citizenship
This module explains three pillars of political sociology: the Nation (imagined solidarity), the State (institutional authority), and Citizenship (rights & membership). We integrate Weber, Renan, Gellner, Anderson, Hobsbawm, A. D. Smith on nation; Weber, Marx/Gramsci/Poulantzas, Parsons, Skocpol, Foucault, Giddens on state; and T. H. Marshall (with feminist/postcolonial critiques) on citizenship, with Indian illustrations for UPSC.
1) Nation: Concepts, Theories & Indian Context
Nation is a historically produced community of sentiment and solidarity, often tied to a shared past, territory, and political project. It differs from the state (institutions of authority) and ethnie (pre-modern cultural cores).
1.1 Classical & Modern Theories
| Thinker / School | Core Idea | Mechanism | UPSC-ready Hook |
|---|---|---|---|
| Max Weber (nation-as-sentiment) | Nation is a community of sentiment claiming a state; nationalism seeks political prestige | Status honour, elite leadership, party | “Nation is a status claim that seeks the state.” |
| Ernest Renan | Nation is a “daily plebiscite”: shared memories + present consent | Selective remembrance/forgetting | Consent-based civic idea |
| Ernest Gellner (modernist) | Industrial society needs cultural standardization → nationalism creates nations | Mass education, literacy, mobility | “Nation is product of modernization.” |
| Benedict Anderson | Nation = “Imagined Community” enabled by print-capitalism | Print-languages, newspapers, novels | Imagining co-nationals beyond face-to-face |
| Eric Hobsbawm | “Invented traditions” cement national identity | Rituals, symbols, commemorations | States curate memory to build nation |
| Anthony D. Smith (ethno-symbolism) | Modern nations draw on ethnie (myths, memories, symbols) | Myth-symbol complexes → modern project | Bridges primordial & modernist views |
| Karl Deutsch | Nation via social communication networks | Mobility, urbanization, media flows | Integration = communicative capacity |
1.2 Types of Nationalism & India
- Civic nationalism (Renan): membership by citizenship and consent.
- Ethnic nationalism (Smith): lineage, culture, language.
- Anti-colonial nationalism (India): unity-in-diversity; leadership, press, associations.
- Subnational/regional nationalism: linguistic federalism as accommodation.
2) State: Monopoly, Theories & Transformations
State is an institutional ensemble that (ideally) claims the monopoly of legitimate physical violence over a territory (Weber). Sociologists debate its nature: neutral arbiter, class instrument, or autonomous actor; and how power operates within/through it.
2.1 Competing Theoretical Lenses
| Perspective | Core Claim | Key Names | Illustration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pluralist | State mediates among competing groups; power dispersed | Dahl, Lindblom | Policy as bargaining outcome |
| Marxist (instrumental) | State serves ruling class interests directly | Miliband | Elite capture in appointments, finance |
| Marxist (structural) | State structurally constrained to reproduce capitalism | Poulantzas | Accumulation–legitimation balance |
| Gramsci | Hegemony in civil society + coercion in political society | Gramsci | Consent + coercion |
| Neo-Weberian | State autonomy & capacity shape outcomes | Weber, Skocpol, Evans | Developmental states |
| Functionalist | State as integrative subsystem enabling AGIL | Parsons | Legitimation & goal attainment |
| Foucauldian | Power via governmentality, biopower, surveillance | Foucault | Statistics, audits, welfare discipline |
| Giddens | State power = control of allocative & authoritative resources | Anthony Giddens | Modern surveillance capacity |
law, police, army
elections, media, school
bureaucracy, data
distribution, discipline
2.2 Globalization & the State
- Rescaling: some capacities shift up (global regimes) and down (local governance).
- Regulatory state: from provider to regulator/arbiter (agencies, tribunals).
- Datafied governance: platforms, metrics, dashboards; raises questions of surveillance/accountability (Foucault/Giddens).
3) Citizenship: Rights, Membership & Inclusion
Citizenship is a legal-political membership status defining rights, duties, and participation. Its expansion reflects struggles for equality and inclusion.
3.1 T. H. Marshall — Three Stages of Rights
| Stage | Content | Institutional Carriers | Illustration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Civil (18th c.) | liberty, property, equality before law | Courts, due process | Rule of law; freedoms |
| Political (19th c.) | vote, representation, office-holding | Parliament, parties | Universal franchise |
| Social (20th c.) | welfare, education, health, decent living | Welfare state, public services | Social security, schooling |
3.2 Critiques & Extensions
- B. S. Turner: social rights uneven; market citizenship under neoliberalism.
- Feminist critiques (Pateman, Walby): formal equality masks gendered care burdens and public/private exclusions.
- Postcolonial (Bhambra): Marshall is Eurocentric; colonial subjects’ rights histories differ.
- Multicultural (Kymlicka): group-differentiated rights for minorities/indigenous peoples.
- Digital citizenship: access, data rights, algorithmic accountability as new frontiers.
3.3 India — Constitutional & Contemporary
| Domain | Provisions/Mechanisms | UPSC Illustration |
|---|---|---|
| Fundamental Rights | Equality, freedoms, protection of life & liberty | Due process, non-discrimination |
| Directive Principles | Social rights goals (health, education, welfare) | Welfare schemes; socio-economic rights |
| Political Participation | Universal adult franchise, federal institutions | Electoral representation; PRIs (73rd/74th) |
| Inclusion | Reservations; targeted programmes | SC/ST/OBC representation; women’s quotas in PRIs |
| Accountability | RTI, social audits, PIL | Transparency & citizen oversight |
| Digital Sphere | e-governance, identity platforms | Service delivery, privacy debates |
4) Answer Writing Toolkit (UPSC)
- Nation: define; contrast modernist (Gellner/Anderson) vs ethno-symbolist (Smith) → apply to India’s unity-in-diversity.
- State: start with Weber’s monopoly → compare pluralist vs Marxist vs neo-Weberian vs Foucauldian → use Indian regulatory/digital examples.
- Citizenship: Marshall’s three stages → critiques (gender, postcolonial, neoliberal) → Indian constitutional/democratic practice.
- Close with a bridge line: nation-building, state capacity, and inclusive citizenship are co-constitutive.
UPSC Summary Pointers
- Nation = imagined political community (Anderson) produced by modernization (Gellner) yet rooted in cultural symbols (A. D. Smith).
- State = monopoly of legitimate force (Weber); analyze via pluralist, Marxist, neo-Weberian, Foucauldian lenses.
- Citizenship: Marshall’s civil→political→social rights; extend with feminist, postcolonial, multicultural, and digital critiques.
- India: civic national frame + plural institutions; constitutional rights + welfare + federal participation define substantive citizenship.
