Abstract
Over the decades, scholarly discourses on sovereignty and globalization have been produced
following various theories and numerous debates about the strength and weakness of the
sovereign nation-state and globalization. In this paper, the various theories on the discourse of
sovereignty and globalization are traced and placed into four categories as: contending paradigm,
globalization paradigm, transformation paradigm and complementary paradigm. Both concepts,
sovereignty and globalization, are explored by adopting the methodological framework, sources
of explanation. The argument is that there is an intricate relationship between these concepts. To
determine the relationship between sovereignty and globalization, three world systems were
examined and it revealed that, globalization is born of the sovereign nation-state and that
globalization can only be assert in the current sovereign world system and not the ones preceding
it. The overall conclusion is that globalization emerged as a result of sovereignty and since the
discourse of sovereignty and globalization is about the same space and its inhabitants, they are
bound to be discursively set against each other if the discourse focusses solely on the phenomena
seen as globalization. The forces of globalization and sovereignty need to be further researched
into to be able to tell where they are leading us.