
Can A Constitutional Democracy Commit Suicide? Can An Illiberal Antidemocratic Party Legitimately Obtain Power Through Democratic Elections And Amend Liberalism And Democracy Out Of The Constitution Entirely? In Weimar Germany, These Theoretical Questions Were Both Practically And Existentially Relevant. By 1932, The Nazi And Communist Parties Combined Held A Majority Of Seats In Parliament. Neither Accepted The Legitimacy Of Liberal Democracy. Their Only Reason For Participating Democratically Was To Amend The Constitution Out Of Existence. This Book Analyses Carl Schmitt's State And Constitutional Theory And Shows How It Was Conceived In Response To The Weimar Crisis. Right-wing And Left-wing Political Extremists Recognized That A Path To Legal Revolution Lay In The Weimar Constitution's Combination Of Democratic Procedures, Total Neutrality Toward Political Goals, And Positive Law. Schmitt's Writings Sought To Address The Unique Problems Posed By Mass Democracy. Schmitt's Thought Anticipated 'constrained' Or 'militant' Democracy, A Type Of Constitution That Guards Against Subversive Expressions Of Popular Sovereignty And Whose Mechanisms Include The Entrenchment Of Basic Constitutional Commitments And Party Bans. Schmitt's State And Constitutional Theory Remains Important: The Problems He Identified Continue To Exist Within Liberal Democratic States. Schmitt Offers Democrats Today A Novel Way To Understand The Legitimacy Of Liberal Democracy And The Limits Of Constitutional Change.
This book investigates whether a constitutional democracy can maintain its integrity when faced with political actors who utilize democratic processes to dismantle liberal institutions. Benjamin A. Schupmann, a scholar of political theory, examines the historical context of the Weimar Republic to analyze how Carl Schmitt’s constitutional theory emerged as a response to the existential threats posed by extremist parties. The author argues that Schmitt’s work provides a framework for understanding 'militant democracy,' where constitutional mechanisms are employed to protect the state from subversion by those seeking to exploit democratic procedures for anti-democratic ends.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and political theorists frequently cite this work as a rigorous examination of the intersection between Schmittian thought and contemporary constitutional challenges. Experts highlight the text for its clarity in connecting historical Weimar-era dilemmas to the ongoing structural vulnerabilities of modern liberal democratic states.
Page Count:
232
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192509314
ISBN-13:
9780192509314
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