This article analyzes and compares the institutionalist theories of law developed by Santi Romano and Carl Schmitt. In the early 1930s, Schmitt referred to Romano to explain his own conversion to an institutionalist jurisprudence, which he preferred to call ‘concrete order thinking’. Both Romano and Schmitt criticized the normativist approach to law characteristic of legal positivism. Instead, they developed an institutionalist approach that regarded legal norms as secondary phenomena, pointing at the importance of the underlying institutional order, which shaped and informed these norms. More particularly, both Romano and Schmitt believed that the crisis of the modern state could only be overcome by recognizing the juristic character of no...
The purpose of this essay is to investigate the relationship between Schmitt’s institutionalist pha...
This essay foregrounds the relevance of Italian jurist Santi Romano’s theorizing to today’s politica...
This articles centres on the persistent intercourse between social order and its undoing. By explor...
This article analyzes and compares the institutionalist theories of law developed by Santi Romano an...
This article analyzes and compares the institutionalist theories of law developed by Santi Romano an...
When and why did Carl Schmitt decide to abandon his original decisionism and to adopt the institutio...
In 1922, Carl Schmitt penned Political Theology, the celebrated essay in which he elaborated on the ...
This article argues for an interactional conception of law, within an institutionalist legal perspec...
This article aims to explore the relation between the legal order of the liberal state and its tende...
The article discusses Carl Schmitt's revision of his own theory after 1928 as he gradually moved fro...
This contribution is intended to provide an answer to a controversial question: Why does Carl Schmit...
This paper argues that Santi Romano’s legal institutionalism is driven by implicit normative assumpt...
We are all institutionalists today; we all think law is produced and applied by its own institutions...
This article conjures the notion of “the impolitical” to address legal institutionalism as a theory ...
All those who lend themselves to the study of Santi Romano’s jur¬isprudence and intellectual legacy ...
The purpose of this essay is to investigate the relationship between Schmitt’s institutionalist pha...
This essay foregrounds the relevance of Italian jurist Santi Romano’s theorizing to today’s politica...
This articles centres on the persistent intercourse between social order and its undoing. By explor...
This article analyzes and compares the institutionalist theories of law developed by Santi Romano an...
This article analyzes and compares the institutionalist theories of law developed by Santi Romano an...
When and why did Carl Schmitt decide to abandon his original decisionism and to adopt the institutio...
In 1922, Carl Schmitt penned Political Theology, the celebrated essay in which he elaborated on the ...
This article argues for an interactional conception of law, within an institutionalist legal perspec...
This article aims to explore the relation between the legal order of the liberal state and its tende...
The article discusses Carl Schmitt's revision of his own theory after 1928 as he gradually moved fro...
This contribution is intended to provide an answer to a controversial question: Why does Carl Schmit...
This paper argues that Santi Romano’s legal institutionalism is driven by implicit normative assumpt...
We are all institutionalists today; we all think law is produced and applied by its own institutions...
This article conjures the notion of “the impolitical” to address legal institutionalism as a theory ...
All those who lend themselves to the study of Santi Romano’s jur¬isprudence and intellectual legacy ...
The purpose of this essay is to investigate the relationship between Schmitt’s institutionalist pha...
This essay foregrounds the relevance of Italian jurist Santi Romano’s theorizing to today’s politica...
This articles centres on the persistent intercourse between social order and its undoing. By explor...