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This special issue of International Studies Review focuses on the "Westphalian Moment" when the modern system of territorially organized states is said to have come into existence. The authors examine a number of issues relating to sovereignty in both its internal and external manifestations, including the role of norms in undermining non-sovereign forms of political organization, manifestations of exclusive authority over territory before Westphalia, the relationship between regional organizations and sovereign states, and the role of environmental interdependence in undermining sovereign institutions.
James A. Caporaso is a professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Washington.
Changes in the Westphalian Order: Territory, Public Authority, and SovereigntyJames A. CaporasoThe Westphalian DeferralDavid L. Blaney and Naeem InayatullahThe End of Empire and the Extension of the Westphalian System: The Normative Basis of the Modern State OrderHendrik SpruytPopes, Kings, and Endogenous Institutions: The Concordat of Worms and the Origins of SovereigntyBruce Bueno de MesquitaEnvironment, Wealth, and Authority: Global Climate Change and Emerging Modes of LegitimationKaren T. LitfinSovereignty Bargains in Regional IntegrationWalter MattliChanging the Rules: Reconceiving Change in the Westphalian SystemKurt Burch