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What if the next great startup were not an app or protocol, but a country? Startup States argues that sovereign nations can be built with the discipline of startups and the legitimacy of international law. Instead of secession, revolution, or digital abstraction, the book advances a treaty-first pathway to statehood grounded in consent, territorial agreement, and institutional design. Drawing from the Montevideo Convention, the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, and modern recognition doctrine, the work reframes sovereignty as a design problem. Just as Silicon Valley reimagined finance, media, and mobility, new states can be engineered deliberately, peacefully, and lawfully within the existing international system. The “Startup State” is not a micronation and not a network fantasy. It is a diplomatically integrated, economically viable, intentionally designed sovereign entity. This book outlines the legal theory, strategic framework, and institutional architecture required to build one. Sovereignty is no longer an accident of history. It can be a product of design.