Part 1: Concepts: decision, institutions and concrete order 1. The bumpy road to institutionalism: Schmitt’s way-out of decisionism 2. Exploring Schmitt’s institutionalism: institutions and normality 3. Institutionalist decisionism: law as the shelter of society 4. Institution and identity: reassessing Schmitt’s political theory Part 2: Oppositions: his "enemies" and "friends" 5. Schmitt vs. Kelsen: the social ontology of legal life 6. Schmitt vs. Hauriou: the politicization of institutionalism 7. Schmitt vs. Romano: institutionalism without pluralism? 8. Schmitt vs. Mortati: the concretization of the concrete order Part 3. Implications: Schmitt’s institutionalism and the current legal debate 9. The impossibility of legal indeterminacy 10. The inconceivability of legal pluralism
Mariano Croce and Andrea Salvatore are based in the Department of Philosophy at Sapienza - the University of Rome
"Carl Schmitt is the most influential but for political reasons
also most controversial German political theorist of the twentieth
century. His influence reaches far beyond national borders and the
field of jurisprudence. The literature on his work is endless. By
now the political implications, all the way to the political
theology, as well as the historical and biographical context have
come under increasing attention. Thus, this book is a healthy
provocation, since the authors understand Schmitt primarily as a
theoretician of law. The core of his theory – contrary to the usual
reduction on "decisionism" – is seen in his institutionalism and
his concept of the concrete order. The attempt to view Schmitt’s
entire work ‘through the lens of his institutional theory’ is a
novelty. The authors move it – this is an unconventional view –
into the proximity of H.L.A. Hart’s concept of legal
standards."Hasso Hofmann, Emeritus Professor of Constitutional Law
and Legal Philosophy, Humboldt-Universität, Berlin"Carl Schmitt was
many things over the course of his long life: political theorist,
theologian, intellectual historian, international lawyer,
polemicist, opportunist, villain, antisemite, Roman Catholic, Nazi.
However, first and foremost, Schmitt was a constitutional jurist.
With The Legal Theory of Carl Schmitt, Mariano Croce and Andrea
Salvatore present to an English-speaking audience for the first
time a comprehensive account of Schmitt legal thinking from across
his entire brilliant and controversial career. The authors trace
Schmitt’s jurisprudence from its early neo-Kantian origins to its
fully developed concrete institutionalism. With clarity and
sophistication they examine Schmitt’s basic concepts and outline
the many debates he engaged in with other prominent Staatsrecht
predecessors and contemporaries. A great achievement and invaluable
resource."John P. McCormick, Professor of Political Science,
University of Chicago."Ours is an intellectual history and ideation
understood through the prism of the emerging practices studied in
historical institutionalism.Conceptual puzzles are provoked by the
indelible and enduring trace of Schmitt’s legal institutionalism.
The lens of Schmitt’s institutional turn provides a spur."
-Richard R. Weiner, The European Legacy
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