Submitted:
08 August 2025
Posted:
13 August 2025
You are already at the latest version
Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
1.1. Problem Statement
1.2. Knowledge Gap
1.3. Research Aims and Propositions:
- P1: Trump's economic agenda is a departure from multilateralism to reinforce unilateral economic nationalism.
- P2: Increasingly, the narrative of sovereignty is based on economic autonomy and control, rather than classical political or military self-rule.
- P3: Restrictive capital controls, skepticism towards Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), and rising anti-outsourcing sentiments are all evidence of re-bordering efforts.
1.4. Empirical Predictions
- Prediction 1: FDI into the United States is subject to increased bureaucratic scrutiny, including lengthened national security reviews.
- Prediction 2: Instead of as a consumer preference, the “Made in America” initiative is reframed as a regulatory or compliance mandate for firms.
- Prediction 3: Digital services, including those crossing borders, are increasingly pressured to localize data and face digital trade barriers as a digital extension of economic rebordering.
1.5. Contributions and Significance
2. Literature Review & Theoretical Framework
2.1. Globalization to Nationalism
2.1.1. The Ebb and Flow of Globalization
2.1.2. Economic Populist Sovereignism
2.2. Drivers of Resurgent Nationalism
2.2.1. Nationalism and De-Globalization
2.2.2. Nativism in Emerging Economies
2.3. Geo-economics and Sovereignty
2.3.1. Geo-economics: Strategic Economic Statecraft
2.3.2. Institutionalization of Economic Rebordering
2.4. Research Gaps
3. Methodology
3.1. Ontology
3.2. Epistemology
3.3. Axiology
3.4. Research Design
3.4.1. Data Sources and Selection
3.4.2. Data Collection and Management
3.5. Analytical Framework and Coding Strategy
3.6. Ethical Considerations
3.7. Limitations
4. Findings
4.1. Reframing Sovereignty: From Market Globalism to National Resilience
4.2. Institutionalizing Rebordering: Bureaucracies of Sovereignty
4.3. Regulating Rebordering: The Practice of Economic Sovereignty
4.4. Synthesis: The Triad of Sovereign Economic Governance
5. Discussion
6. Conclusion
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| Main Theme | Sub-Theme | Description | Code |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Discursive Construction of Sovereignty | 1.1 Semantic Shift from Military to Economic Sovereignty | Repositioning sovereignty from political/military domains to economic control and autonomy. | DS_1.1 |
| 1.2 Rhetorical Anchoring in Strategic Language | Use of terms like resilience, independence, and strategic autonomy to justify protectionist policies. | DS_1.2 | |
| 1.3 Reframing of Globalization as a Threat | Globalization is portrayed as undermining national sovereignty and economic security. | DS_1.3 | |
| 2. Instrumentalization of Economic Nationalism | 2.1 Populist Narratives in Economic Policy | Appeals to public sentiment, positioning trade policies as a defense of domestic workers and producers. | EN_2.1 |
| 2.2 Protectionism as Moral Economy | Protectionist policies are framed as ethically justified responses to unfair global systems. | EN_2.2 | |
| 2.3 Economic Sovereignty as Cultural Identity | National identity and heritage are linked with economic self-reliance and production. | EN_2.3 | |
| 3. Policy Instruments as Rebordering Tools | 3.1 Tariffs and Investment Controls | Use of state mechanisms like tariffs and FDI screening to control economic borders. | PI_3.1 |
| 3.2 Localization Mandates and Digital Borders | Regulatory requirements that force firms to localize data and production within national borders. | PI_3.2 | |
| 3.3 Repatriation Incentives and Reshoring | Policies encouraging domestic manufacturing and penalizing offshore operations. | PI_3.3 |
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