Strategies of the Stateless: Counter-Sovereignty and Counter-Hegemony as Structural Resistance
Shehrbano Asif
Abstract
With the foundational strategies of stateless resistance forming the base of the novel comparative framework employed, this paper posits that long-term endurance and power are derived, not from episodic violence, but from the sustained construction of alternative political orders. It theorizes two distinct structural logics: the external “counter-sovereignty” model and the internal “counter-hegemony” model. The counter-sovereignty approach, exemplified by the diplomatic campaigns of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR), constitutes a form of legal and diplomatic insurgency. Furthermore, it operates by meticulously adopting the rituals of statecraft – seeking recognition, establishing representative offices, engaging multilateral bodies – to weave a credible, alternative sovereignty into the fabric of the international system. This external strategy aims to systematically internationalize the conflict, fracture the opponent’s exclusive claim to legitimacy, and render the maintenance of occupation diplomatically and legally prohibitive through accrued costs and constraints. Conversely, the counter-hegemony model, examined through a Gramscian lens in the case of Hamas, represents an inward-focus “war of position”. Its core mechanism is the patient construction of a parallel societal order within the contested territory. This is achieved through the provision of essential services (the Dawa social wing), the control of religious and educational institutions, and the propagation of a potent ‘protector’ narrative that frames the movement as the sole authentic guardian against existential threats. This strategy seeks to win local moral and political hegemony, effectively delegitimizing both the occupying power and domestic political rivals by embedding itself as the indispensable authority within the daily life and consciousness of the population. By juxtaposing these models, the paper makes a critical intervention in resistance studies by demonstrating that the most impactful resistance in asymmetric, protracted conflicts operates on this structural and institutional plane, far beyond the headline-grabbing tactical clash. Whether building power from the outside-in via global diplomacy or inside-out via local governance, successful movements master the art of creating irreversible political and social facts. This comparative framework, thereafter, provides an effective analytical tool for understanding how stateless actors navigate extreme asymmetry in an attempt to not just oppose a dominant power, but also to consciously forge the foundational pillars of contested sovereignty and enduring legitimacy.
Key words: resistance; stateless; legitimacy; counter-sovereignty; counter-hegemony; SADR; Hamas