Thesis
Restricted Access

State and Civil War: A comparative analysis of the political thought of Carl Schmitt and Vladimir I Lenin

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Files
Bolsinger_1999.pdf (21.79 MB)
PDF in Restricted Access
License
Access Rights
Full-text via DOI
ISBN
ISSN
Issue Date
Type of Publication
Keyword(s)
Other Topic(s)
EUI Research Cluster(s)
Initial version
Succeeding version
Preceding version
Published version part
Earlier different version
Initial format
Citation
Florence : European University Institute, 1999
EUI; SPS; PhD Thesis
Cite
BOLSINGER, Eckard, State and Civil War: A comparative analysis of the political thought of Carl Schmitt and Vladimir I Lenin, Florence : European University Institute, 1999, EUI, SPS, PhD Thesis - https://hdl.handle.net/1814/5185
Abstract
The end of the Cold War has seen the resurgence of old patterns of internal and external armed conflicts. War and civil war as factors in the process of the dissolution and formation of political structures have reappeared even within Europe. In the post-Cold War world politics appears less to be ordered by clear principles. Instead, it is insecure and undermined by violence and instability) It would, however, be misleading to assume that the contemporary experience of eruptive violence simply signifies an aberration from a peaceful path of social and political development. Against the identification of modernization and the gradual decline of (civil) wars, Hans Joas (1996), in close reference to current historical sociology, has emphasized that external and internal forms of armed struggle cannot be seen as deviations, anomalies, or interruptions in the development of modern social and political structures. Rather, they represent their inherent feature.2 According to his view, (civil) war and violence are constitutive parts of mRdernity and not its prehistory; the ongoing military and armed conflicts are thus only a reminder of this close connection. How should political theory react to the central role of (civil) war and armed violence in shaping modern political structures? If current historical sociology is right that (civil) war and armed conflicts lie at the foundations of modern politics, political theory would find its overriding field of interest in the conceptual analysis of politics and violence.
Table of Contents
Additional Information
Defence date: 25 June 1999
Examining board: Prof. Paolo Q. Hirst (Birkbeck College, London) ; Prof. Pasquale Pasquino (CNRS, Paris) ; Prof. Gianfranco Poggi (EUI-Supervisor) ; Prof. Peter Wagner (EUI)
PDF of thesis uploaded from the Library digitised archive of EUI PhD theses completed between 2013 and 2017
External Links
Geographical Coverage
Temporal Coverage
Version
Source
Source Link
Research Projects
Sponsorship and Funder Information
Collections