- implicit agreement between individuals and the state: individuals yield some liberty in exchange for security, order, and public goods
- foundational thinkers
- Hobbes (Leviathan, 1651): without the state, life is solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short; absolute sovereign as solution
- Locke (Two Treatises, 1689): government exists to protect life, liberty, and property; right to revolution if contract is violated
- Rousseau (The Social Contract, 1762): legitimate authority derives from collective agreement, general will
- the constitution is the written embodiment of the social contract
- taxation is the material expression: citizens fund collective services in exchange for protection and infrastructure
- breakdown of social contract leads to revolution, secession, or exodus
- network state as voluntary social contract: opt-in communities with explicit terms, exit rights preserved
- cyber protocols encode a digital social contract: stake tokens, follow consensus rules, gain access to shared knowledge graph
- citizenship is the formal status conferred by accepting the social contract
- see also sovereignty, democracy, human rights, governance