<p><em>The work develops a detailed and convincing account of (post)modern sovereignty that will be of great interest to many, offering a sophisticated and innovative theoretical orientation for thinking in this area. By detaching sovereignty from the state, Joyce’s auto-positioned sovereignty offers ways of understanding how and why sovereign claims remain alluring, but ultimately impossible, at both a local and international level.</em> - <strong>Daniel Matthews</strong>, Birkbeck Law School for <strong><em>Law, Culture and the Humanities</em></strong>, 2014</p><p><em>Richard Joyce’s Competing Sovereignties (CS) is a monograph whose argumentative eloquence and intellectual provocation has absolutely emerged as one of the foremost among the last generation of works on modern states sovereignty.</em> - <strong>Elia R.G. Pusterla</strong>, London School of Economics and Political Science for <strong><em>Swiss Political Science Review </em></strong>(2014) Vol. 20(1)</p>