ABSTRACT

Panarchy is a normative political meta-theory that advocates non-territorial states founded on actual social contracts that are explicitly negotiated and signed between states and their prospective citizens. The explicit social contract, or a constitution, sets the terms under which a state may use coercion against its citizens and the conditions under which the contract may be annulled, revised, rescinded, or otherwise exited from. Panarchy does not advocate any particular model of the state or social justice, but intends to encourage political variety, innovation, experimentation, and choice. With its emphasis on explicit social contracts, Panarchy offers an interesting variation on traditional social contract theories.

Today, Panarchist political thought is particularly relevant and interesting in the context of globalization, increased international migration, the weakening of national sovereignty, the rise of the internet "cloud" as a non-territorial locus of political and protopolitical social networks that are not geographic, the invention of cryptocurrencies that may replace national currencies, and the rise of urban centers where people of many different political identities live and work together.

This is the first volume to bring together key philosophically and politically interesting yet often overlooked Panarchist texts. From the first published translation of de Puydt seminal 1860 article to contemporary Silicon Valley political theory, the volume includes Panarchist texts from different eras, cultures and geographical regions. The amassed wealth of theoretical insight enables readers to compare different texts in this tradition of political thought and distinguish different streams and varieties within this political tradition, in comparison with Cosmopolitanism, Contractarianism, and Anarchism.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

part |66 pages

Classical Foundations

chapter |6 pages

Panarchy

A Forgotten Idea of 1860

chapter |4 pages

Panarchy

Described by the Simple System of Aphthonius

part |95 pages

Contemporary Political Philosophy and Theory

chapter |27 pages

The Unbundled State

Economic Theory of Non-Territorial Unbundling

chapter |26 pages

The Best States

Panarchy as an Anti-Utopia

chapter |3 pages

The Nakamoto Consensus

A Framework for Ending Bad Governance

part |44 pages

Historical Precedents

chapter |5 pages

Extraterritoriality

Its Rise and Its Decline

chapter |26 pages

Non-Territorial Governance, Mankind's Forgotten Legacy

A Review of Shih Shun Liu's Extraterritoriality: Its Rise and Its Decline

part |31 pages

Hybrid Non-Territorial and Territorial Models

chapter |13 pages

A Utopia?

Government without Territorial Monopoly