Carl Schmitt is one of the most contentious political theorists of the twentieth century. His complicity in Nazi Germany left him discredited yet he has continued to attract widespread attention as an insightful, if flawed, critic of the modern democratic order and its global ambitions. His assertion that 'whoever invokes humanity is trying to cheat' has been revived as a indictment of western especially American, intervention in the affairs of other countries. As a German philosopher Jurgen Habermas has noted Schmitt's arguments potentially have a fatal appeal in the contemporary world. The essays in this volume explore related aspects of Schmitt's arguments against intervention, about the concept of the enemy, political myth, occupation a...
This article offers an unconventional interpretation of Carl Schmitt’s conception of the political. ...
Carl Schmitt, April 1939: „Der Reichsbegriff im Völkerrecht“. A Text Genesis StudyThe article recons...
ABSTRACT. This article addresses, from a Frankfurt School perspective on law iden-tified with Franz ...
This article explores Carl Schmitt's concept of the enemy against the backcloth of the international...
Carl Schmitt's work on the international order during the Second World War has been comparatively ne...
This paper presents an overview of Carl Schmitt's theoretical considerations of the concept of the p...
The Oxford Handbook of Carl Schmitt collects thirty original chapters on the diverse oeuvre of one o...
[EN] While initially criticism of liberal democracy was the aspect of Carl Schmitt’s work which rec...
There continues to be a remarkable revival in academic interest in Carl Schmitt's thought within pol...
Carl Schmitt is usually perceived as the theorist of total state, total war and total hostility. In ...
The book investigates the connection between Carl Schmitt's 'Concept of the political' (1932) and 'T...
This paper examines the downfall of the state as the traditional political concept during the twenti...
The ongoing Schmitt revival has extended Carl Schmitt's reach over the fields of international legal...
This article seeks to question the 'critical' readings of Carl Schmitt's understanding of internatio...
Carl Schmitt was an intellectual who made the discipline of international law grapple with the major...
This article offers an unconventional interpretation of Carl Schmitt’s conception of the political. ...
Carl Schmitt, April 1939: „Der Reichsbegriff im Völkerrecht“. A Text Genesis StudyThe article recons...
ABSTRACT. This article addresses, from a Frankfurt School perspective on law iden-tified with Franz ...
This article explores Carl Schmitt's concept of the enemy against the backcloth of the international...
Carl Schmitt's work on the international order during the Second World War has been comparatively ne...
This paper presents an overview of Carl Schmitt's theoretical considerations of the concept of the p...
The Oxford Handbook of Carl Schmitt collects thirty original chapters on the diverse oeuvre of one o...
[EN] While initially criticism of liberal democracy was the aspect of Carl Schmitt’s work which rec...
There continues to be a remarkable revival in academic interest in Carl Schmitt's thought within pol...
Carl Schmitt is usually perceived as the theorist of total state, total war and total hostility. In ...
The book investigates the connection between Carl Schmitt's 'Concept of the political' (1932) and 'T...
This paper examines the downfall of the state as the traditional political concept during the twenti...
The ongoing Schmitt revival has extended Carl Schmitt's reach over the fields of international legal...
This article seeks to question the 'critical' readings of Carl Schmitt's understanding of internatio...
Carl Schmitt was an intellectual who made the discipline of international law grapple with the major...
This article offers an unconventional interpretation of Carl Schmitt’s conception of the political. ...
Carl Schmitt, April 1939: „Der Reichsbegriff im Völkerrecht“. A Text Genesis StudyThe article recons...
ABSTRACT. This article addresses, from a Frankfurt School perspective on law iden-tified with Franz ...