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sovereignty

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sovereignty

1. supreme and unrestricted power, as of a state
2. the position, dominion, or authority of a sovereign
3. an independent state
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

sovereignty

the supreme, theoretically unrestricted, political POWER by which a STATE is identified. The concept acquired particular importance throughout Europe in the 16th and 17th centuries, in association with the formation of the modern NATION STATE (see also ABSOLUTISM, HOBBES).
Collins Dictionary of Sociology, 3rd ed. © HarperCollins Publishers 2000

sovereignty

Government control. Regarding high-tech, sovereignty pertains to how much control a government has over its citizens' data.
Copyright © 1981-2025 by The Computer Language Company Inc. All Rights reserved. THIS DEFINITION IS FOR PERSONAL USE ONLY. All other reproduction is strictly prohibited without permission from the publisher.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Sovereignty

 

supreme, independent power exercised in a state’s domestic and foreign policy. The term “sovereignty” was first used in reference to constitutional law in the 16th century by the French scholar J. Bodin. The concept of popular sovereignty was used by the bourgeoisie in its struggle against absolutism and feudalism in order to win the support of the common people. Sovereignty varies in different socioeconomic systems, depending on the class-oriented nature of state power and the economic structure of a given society. The power of the people is the basis of sovereignty in socialist states.

Sovereignty is manifested above all in the way a state functions, but it is most apparent in the system of state rights, including sovereign rights. It is precisely the state’s powers that ensure the state’s authority and thus its sovereignty. Supreme state power in a society is characterized by the establishment of law and order and the granting of rights and duties to officials, public organizations, and citizens. These characteristics distinguish state power from other forms of authority, for example, in a family or social group. Only state power can authoritatively influence and, when necessary, exercise coercion on all aspects of life in human society; state power is in effect universal and sovereign in nature.

A state’s domestic sovereignty is closely linked with its independence from foreign powers. Sovereignty gives a state independence in international relations and allows it to act as an autonomous party in matters of international law. The foreign policy of the USSR recognizes the sovereign equality of all states, regardless of the sociopolitical system, economic development, size, or population. The principle of sovereign equality, which is set forth in the UN Charter, is one of the universally recognized principles of modern international law.

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
In the case of Iraq, the international community worked together, under US leadership, to force Iraq back into its own boundaries, therefore reinforcing the concept of state sovereignty and territorial integrity.
While a country's food sovereignty is key to its own food supply and food security by ensuring access, it is that same food sovereignty, which if adopted vigorously by many countries, can undermine the world's state of global food security.
The latter use the intangible nature of the former to enjoy complete hegemony over sovereignty, with the Constitution clarifying that neither of these mysterious, impalpable and yet omnipresent entities be questioned.
(10) Similarly, in Coe v Common Wealth of Australia, (11) Justice Jacobs of the High Court of Australia stated that a challenge to a nations sovereignty was "not cognisable in a court exercising jurisdiction under that sovereignty which is sought to be challenged." (12)
The word "sovereignty" comes from the Latin word "superanus," which means supreme or paramount.
"The Cyprus Republic, as a full member of the EU, cannot conceivably have a limited sovereignty, as would result from occupation troops and anachronistic third-party guarantees," he said.
Jaitley a day ago told the media in Japan, where he is attending deliberations of the Asian Development Bank, that the OBOR and its Pakistani component of CPEC (China Pakistan Economic Corridors) raises sovereignty issues for India.
Calculating the percentages of respondents with an opinion (that is without the respondents who replied 'I do not know'), the balance of the results is as follows: 35% support autonomy under the sovereignty of Israel, 21% support a gradual Israeli sovereignty, 35% prefer immediate and full Israeli sovereignty and 9% support establishment of a Palestinian state in Judea and Samaria.
However, it is most disappointing that the Leave campaign has equated 'sovereignty' with 'immigration'.
'SOVEREIGNTY' - the Oxford Dictionary definition is 'exempt from external control'.
Holder relied on the "fundamental principle" and "historic tradition" of equal sovereignty to hold one of the Voting Rights Act's key provisions unconstitutional.
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