Abstract
Over the past three decades, a debate has been developing in the
world over the dynamics and legitimacy of the fragmentation of state territorial
space, its sovereignty and unitary character, i.e., those geographical
elements that have dominated European and later world political organization
since the end of the medieval age. This discussion has been
stimulated especially by the collapse of the Soviet Empire. The proliferation
of declarations of independence have forced many scholars of political
philosophy, law, sociology, and international relations to see that the
international order, composed of sovereign territorial states, believed to
be immobile and eternal (according to the principles of jus publicum europaeum),
was undergoing profound changes.