State of Exception Notes

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 8/10/2019 State of Exception Notes

    1/5

    Reading Group: Giorgio Agambens State of Exception

    1. A Brief History on the State of Exception (pp. 11-22)

    a.

    Modern States

    At least 147 countries with constitutional provisions allowing for states of

    emergency (Humphreys 683)

    (Constitution of 22 Frimaire Year 8, Article 92):

    In the case of armed revolt or disturbances that would threaten the security of the

    State, the law can, in the places and for the time that it determines, suspend the

    rule of the constitution.(5)

    (Article 20, German Federal Republic):

    Against anyone who attempts to abolish [the democratic constitution], all

    Germans have a right of resistance, if no other remedies are possible.(11)

    An estimated 30 countries were in some form of state of emergency in 1978, the

    number was 70 in 1986 (Humphreys 683)

    b.

    WWI (and beyond) as a laboratory for the state of exception

    Weimar Consitution (19191933)

    If security and public order are seriously disturbed or threatened in the

    German Reich, the president of the Reich may take the measures necessary to

    reestablish security and public order, with the help of the armed forces ifrequired. To this end he may wholly or partially suspend the fundamental rights

    established in Articles 114, 115, 117, 118, 123, 124, and 153(Article 48)

    Carl Schmitt: no constitution on earth had so easily legalized a coup detat as

    did the Weimar Constitution(15)

    In fact, Article 48 was declared on more than 250 times

    The defunct parliament and porous constitution allowed Hitler to take over

    Germany

    According to Agamben, [N]either Hitler nor Mussolini can technically be

    defined as dictators . . . they placed beside the legal constitution a second

    structure, often not legally formalized, that could exist alongside the other

    because of the state of exception(48).

    France 1924:

    The Poincare government asked for full powers over financial matters when the

    franc faced serious instability.

    United States (pp. 1922)

    The case of Lincoln and Civil War (pp. 20)

    A turn from military emergencies to economic emergencies after the Great

  • 8/10/2019 State of Exception Notes

    2/5

    Depression (Roosevelt)

    Bush as Commander in Chief of the Armyafter 9/11

    c.

    The Latin/Roman Law Tradition (1.9)

    necessity has no law

    If there is . . . a sudden danger, regarding which there is no time for recourse to a

    higher authority, the very necessity carries a dispensation with it, for necessity is

    not subject to the law

    State of Exception has a recourse to a theory of necessity

    Two questions

    Who/what/how decides on the necessity? Is the decision itself inside or

    outside the juridical order?

    Whether necessity (just ends) justifies the means (state of exception)?

    d. History of iustitium in Roman Tradition

    Iustitium: literally, a standstill/suspension of law

    Originally, a state of iustitium is declared by the final decree of senate (senatus

    consultum ultimum)

    With the end of the Roman Republic, iustitiumacquired a new meaning, in which it

    acquire[d] the meaning of public mourning for the death of the sovereign or his

    close relative(65).

    For instance, Emperor Augustus proclaimed a iustitiumevery time the family

    mausoleum was opened.

    2. Theoretic Background on the State of Exception

    e. Constitutional Dictatorship vs. Unconstitutional Dictatorship (1.5)

    Key figures include: Carl Schmitt, Carl Friedrich, Clinton Rossiter

    These scholars sought to study, in their own ways, the systematic expansion of

    executive powerswhen a state of siege was declared in cases of emergency.

    Schmitt:

    The sovereign is he who decides on the state of exception

    Schmitt distinguishes between commissarial and sovereign dictatorship

    The former seeks to preserve the constitution, while the latter leads to its

    overthrow/revolt

    Nevertheless, regardless of the form of dictatorship, for Schmitt the state of

    exception is always something different from anarchy and chaos, in a juridical

    sense, an order still exists in it, even if it is not a juridical order(33)

    Rossiter:

  • 8/10/2019 State of Exception Notes

    3/5

    Sought to justify the necessity of constitutional dictatorship

    Yet, as Agamben points out, the distinction between commissarial dictatorship

    and sovereign dictatorship is not one of nature but of degree(9).

    [N]o sacrifice is too great for our democracy, least of all the temporary

    sacrifice of democracy itself.

    f. Walter Benjamin

    On the Concept of History (Theses VIII):

    The tradition of the oppressed teaches us that the emergency situation in which

    we live is the rule. We must arrive at a concept of history which corresponds to this.

    Then it will become clear that the task before us is the introduction of a real state

    of emergency; and our position in the struggle against Fascism will thereby

    improve. . .

    Critique of Violence(4.2)

    The essay explores the possibility of a violence that lies beyond the binary/dialectic

    between law-making & law-preserving violence

    3. Summary of Agambens Theory of the State of Exception

    i.

    The state of exception is a paradigmatic form of governmentfor contemporary

    states, including so-called democratic ones. (1.2)

    S.O.E. allows for the exclusion of citizens / non-citizens from their basic rights(homo sacer)

    It is in this sense that the S.O.E. is biopolitical, i.e. law-encompassing-life

    For Agamben, S.O.E. marks the threshold of indeterminacybetween

    democracy and absolutism

    ii. In the Western legal tradition, the state of exception is divided into those orders that

    regulate it via constitution, and those that do not regulate the problem explicitly

    (1.6)

    In other words, traditional legal theorists either think of it as something

    internal to the juridical order (i.e. S.O.E. can be regulated and justified by law),

    and those who see it as external to the juridical (i.e. S.O.E. as regulated by a

    good faith that is extra-legal)

    iii. The inside/outside opposition is insufficient in accounting for the S.O.E. (1.8)

    iv. Similarly, the necessity/law binary is insufficient to ground the S.O.E. (1.10)

    There is a belief, from Roman Law tradition onwards, that thinks that necessity

    or expedience is sufficient to release a particular case from the obligation to

    observe the law

    There are also those who see necessity as the first and originary source of all

  • 8/10/2019 State of Exception Notes

    4/5

    law

    v. Force-of-law

    vi. For Agamben, the state of exception is kenomatic rather than pleromatic (3.6)

    Where Schmitt tries to legalize the non-legal (state of exception) via his theory

    of dictatorship, Agamben seeks to de-link law from violence by way of

    Benjamin

    For Schmitt, the Sovereign is the figure with the full power to (legally) intervene

    and decide on the state of exception. He is Godlike in being-outside, and yet

    belonging(thus the title Political Theology).

    For Agamben, however, this problematic relation of the sovereign to law

    where there is no locatable point for the figure of the sovereignprecisely

    makes of the sovereign decision a decision without legal ground.

    Ultimately, the distinction is between that of iustitium/dictatorship, suspension

    of power/full power, natural state of law/force-of-law, kenomatic/pleromatic.

    vii. Delving into the exoteric debate between Schmitt and Benjamin, Agamben

    disentangles justice from law, violence from ends, purity from substance, human

    action from law:

    viii.

    By way of Benjamin, Agamben seeks to deposeof law, to de-link life from the

    violence thatpurportsto be law, to studyor playwith law so that it opens up a

    gate[way] of justice (4.8):

    4. Legal Disputes

    a.

    Does not address the separation of power and/or other check-and-balance mechanisms

    within the state

    5. Questions:

    If, as Agamben demonstrates, the executive, the legislative and judiciary is founded

    on a fictitious rather than substantial separation, how do we think a politics where

    violence/life/law are separated? What does this non-relationmean?

    If the state of exception has indeed become a paradigm for the modern

    government; if, in other words, the problematic locusof a state of exception is

    nothing less than the place and method with which modern govern-mentality

    realizes its acute power, then, how and where should we situate

    resistance-from-below under a post-totalitarian regime? (What does it mean to act

    politically?)

  • 8/10/2019 State of Exception Notes

    5/5

    How do we construe of resistance movements that do not seek to destroy state

    sovereignty outright?

    How do we think the state of exception in its specificity, i.e. in specific cases and/or

    contexts? How are these zones of anomie (in which law purports to, but ultimately

    fails to, intervene) effectuated in and through modern governmentality?

    6. References:

    a. Legalizing Lawlessness: On Giorgio Agambens State of Exception

    http://207.57.19.226/journal/Vol17/No3/art7.pdf

    b. Notes on the Thought of Walter Benjamin: Critique of Violence

    http://criticallegalthinking.com/2013/10/11/notes-thought-walter-benjamin-critique-vio

    lence/

    c.

    Giorgio Agamben: Destroying Sovereignty

    http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/in-theory-giorgio-agamben-destroying-sovereignty/

    d. Walter Benjamin: Critique of the State

    http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/walter-benjamin-critique-state/

    http://207.57.19.226/journal/Vol17/No3/art7.pdfhttp://207.57.19.226/journal/Vol17/No3/art7.pdfhttp://criticallegalthinking.com/2013/10/11/notes-thought-walter-benjamin-critique-violence/http://criticallegalthinking.com/2013/10/11/notes-thought-walter-benjamin-critique-violence/http://criticallegalthinking.com/2013/10/11/notes-thought-walter-benjamin-critique-violence/http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/in-theory-giorgio-agamben-destroying-sovereignty/http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/in-theory-giorgio-agamben-destroying-sovereignty/http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/walter-benjamin-critique-state/http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/walter-benjamin-critique-state/http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/walter-benjamin-critique-state/http://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/in-theory-giorgio-agamben-destroying-sovereignty/http://criticallegalthinking.com/2013/10/11/notes-thought-walter-benjamin-critique-violence/http://criticallegalthinking.com/2013/10/11/notes-thought-walter-benjamin-critique-violence/http://207.57.19.226/journal/Vol17/No3/art7.pdf