On Legal Positivism's Word and our 'Form-of-(non-)Living'
Version 2 2024-06-13, 09:53Version 2 2024-06-13, 09:53
Version 1 2016-07-20, 14:37Version 1 2016-07-20, 14:37
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 09:53authored byL Siliquini-Cinelli
AbstractThis paper is about two stories. The more reassuring one states that by establishing that a norm is valid because of its source, not its merit, legal positivism is, in its various forms, perhaps one of the greatest achievements in Western legal theory and practice. From constitutionalism to human rights policies, from criminal to international law and free trade agreements, from contracts to torts and e-commerce, legal validity, predictability, and coherence have found their most powerful ally in positivist thought. This contribution argues that it is time for a different, neorealist story: the metaphysical, ontological and biopolitical essence of its language demonstrates that legal positivism has in fact played a fundamental role in the substitution of action with behaviour, and consequently, in the normalisation of humankind’s self-annihilating animality as post-historical and post-political ‘form-of-(non-)living.’
History
Journal
Global Jurist
Volume
16
Pagination
211-241
Location
Berlin, Germany
ISSN
2194-5675
eISSN
1934-2640
Language
eng
Publication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal, C Journal article