The Partisan: Carl Schmitt and Terrorism

Law and Critique 17 (3):267-295 (2006)
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Abstract

The words terror and terrorism are used widely today and are used to denote an illegitimate act of violence. War, on the other hand is used as a more open concept, the legitimacy of every particular act is at least placed under limited debate. The issue of how our thoughts upon the legitimacy of violence are ordered by the framing of the legal concepts of terror and war is an important contemporary question. One way into this question is by giving an account of Carl Schmitt’s theory of ‘partisan war.’ Introducing Schmitt’s concept of the ‘partisan’ into Anglophone legal theory is the main aim of this paper.

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References found in this work

Elements of the philosophy of right.Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel - 1991 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Allen W. Wood & Hugh Barr Nisbet.
Hegel contra sociology.Gillian Rose - 1981 - [Atlantic Highlands] N.J.: Humanities Press.
The theory of the partisan.Carl Schmitt - 2004 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 127:11-78.

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