|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
It is a commonplace of Schmitt scholarship that the controversial
thinker sought to recapture some of the elan of the pre-Weimar
state through his advocacy of effectively almost unlimited
presidential government. Seitzer demonstrates how Schmitt believed
comparative history itself could reinvigorate the ailing German
state by subtly altering prevailing understandings of the relation
of theory and practice in law and politics. Treating Schmitt's
Constitutional Theory and Guardian of the Constitution as
methodologically sophisticated comparative histories, Seitzer turns
Schmitt's argument against itself. He shows how Schmitt's
comparative histories, when properly executed, support a
decentralized solution to the Republic's difficulties directly
contrary to Schmitt's in terms of its purpose and effect.
Problem-oriented, comparative-historical studies of key features of
the Weimar system suggest that the dispersion of political power
facilitates an institutional dialogue over constitutional principle
and practice that better provides for political stability and
democratic experimentation. These studies also suggest that linking
forms of justification with institutions establishes a productive
tension among norms and institutions that is essential to
maintaining the viability of constitutional democracy, both in the
short- and long-term. This work will be of considerable value to
Schmitt scholars and those interested in German legal and political
theory as well as those concerned with broad issues in comparative
law and European history and political theory.
Carl Schmitt ranks among the most original and controversial
political thinkers of the twentieth century. His incisive
criticisms of Enlightenment political thought and liberal political
practice remain as shocking and significant today as when they
first appeared in Weimar Germany. Unavailable in English until now,
Legality and Legitimacy was composed in 1932, in the midst of the
crisis that would lead to the collapse of the Weimar Republic and
only a matter of months before Schmitt’s collaboration with the
Nazis. In this important work, Schmitt questions the political
viability of liberal constitutionalism, parliamentary government,
and the rule of law. Liberal governments, he argues, cannot respond
effectively to challenges by radical groups like the Nazis or
Communists. Only a presidential regime subject to few, if any,
practical limitations can ensure domestic security in a highly
pluralistic society.Legality and Legitimacy is sure to provide a
compelling reference point in contemporary debates over the
challenges facing constitutional democracies today. In addition to
Jeffrey Seitzer’s translation of the 1932 text itself, this
volume contains his translation of Schmitt’s 1958 commentary on
the work, extensive explanatory notes, and an appendix including
selected articles of the Weimar constitution. John P. McCormick’s
introduction places Legality and Legitimacy in its historical
context, clarifies some of the intricacies of the argument, and
ultimately contests Schmitt’s claims regarding the inherent
weakness of parliamentarism, constitutionalism, and the rule of
law.
Carl Schmitt's magnum opus, Constitutional Theory, was originally
published in 1928 and has been in print in German ever since. This
volume makes Schmitt's masterpiece of comparative constitutionalism
available to English-language readers for the first time. Schmitt
is considered by many to be one of the most original-and, because
of his collaboration with the Nazi party, controversial-political
thinkers of the twentieth century. In Constitutional Theory,
Schmitt provides a highly distinctive and provocative
interpretation of the Weimar Constitution. At the center of this
interpretation lies his famous argument that the legitimacy of a
constitution depends on a sovereign decision of the people. In
addition to being subject to long-standing debate among legal and
political theorists in Western Europe and the United States, this
theory of constitution-making as decision has profoundly influenced
constitutional theorists and designers in Asia, Latin America, and
Eastern Europe. Constitutional Theory is a significant departure
from Schmitt's more polemical Weimar-era works not just in terms of
its moderate tone. Through a comparative history of constitutional
government in Europe and the United States, Schmitt develops an
understanding of liberal constitutionalism that makes room for a
strong, independent state. This edition includes an introduction by
Jeffrey Seitzer and Christopher Thornhill outlining the cultural,
intellectual, and political contexts in which Schmitt wrote
Constitutional Theory; they point out what is distinctive about the
work, examine its reception in the postwar era, and consider its
larger theoretical ramifications. This volume also contains
extensive editorial notes and a translation of the Weimar
Constitution.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R398
R369
Discovery Miles 3 690
|