The Trinity of State Decay (TSD) advances a theoretical claim: state decay in the Global South is not institutional malfunction but a sovereignty event — the structural decoupling of juridical statehood from empirical authority into rival orders. This departs from failed state theory, hybrid governance, and fragility frameworks, which operate at the national aggregate and cannot explain the coexistence of functional and decoupled sovereignty within the same juridical unit. TSD identifies two formations: the Institutional Mirage, which performs authority without possessing it, and the Shadow Order, which governs without formal legitimacy. Their interaction is sustained by the Money-Land-Mind dynamic, displacingfinancial, territorial, and normative authority from the state to rival structures. Decay is zonal before national, partial before total. Recovery requires strict sequencing: protection before compliance, compliance before territorial credibility, and credibility before institutional function; inversion produces relapse. Drawing on African political thought, postcolonial theory, classical political theory, and comparative politics, TSD offers a generalisable framework for analysing sovereign fragmentation. Its empirical operationalisation — including quantitative measurement of decoupling depth and recovery sequencing — is developed in the companion Decoupling Sovereignty Index (DSI), Part 2 of this series.
Max Amuchie (Sun,) studied this question.