Western Sahara as A Hybrid of a Parastate and a State-inexile: (Extra)territoriality and the Small Print of Sovereignty in a Context of Frozen Conflict
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Cambridge University Press
Fecha
2019Resumen
This article argues that the “declarative” parastate of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR)
claiming sovereignty over Western Sahara is better understood as a hybrid between a parastate and a statein-
exile. It relies more on external, “international legal sovereignty,” than on internal, “Westphalian” and
“domestic” sovereignty. While its Algerian operational base in the Tindouf refugee camps makes it work as a
primarily extraterritorial state-in-exile de facto, the SADR maintains control over one quarter of Western
Sahara’s territory proper allowing it to at least partially meet the requirements for declarative statehood de
jure. Many case-specific nuances surround the internal sovereignty of the SADR in relation to criteria for
statehood: territory, population, and government. However, examining this case in a comparative light
reveals similarities with other (secessionist) parastates. The SADR exists within the context of a frozen
conflict, where the stalemate has been reinforced by an ineffective internationally brokered peace settlement
and the indefinite presence of international peacekeeping forces. Global powers have played a major role in
prolonging the conflict’s status quo while the specific resilience of the SADR as a parastate has been ensured
by support from Algeria as an external sponsor. The path to sovereignty appears to be blocked in every
possible way.