Carl Schmitt Nomos Of The Earth Pdf [Chrome]
Today, the "Nomos of the Earth" remains a vital text for scholars of international relations, political theology, and geography. It challenges the liberal assumption that universal human rights and global institutions like the UN lead to peace. Instead, Schmitt suggests that without a clear spatial order and a recognition of the limits of power, the world risks falling into a state of permanent, borderless conflict.
Published in 1950 (though written in the aftermath of World War II), the book is Carl Schmitt’s sweeping historical and legal analysis of how the world has been spatially ordered—divided, claimed, and fought over—from the discovery of the Americas to the mid-20th century. carl schmitt nomos of the earth pdf
The core of the book focuses on the rise and fall of the "Jus Publicum Europaeum"—the public law of Europe that existed from the 16th century until the early 20th century. During this period, European states recognized each other as equal sovereigns. This recognition allowed for "bracketed war," where conflict was limited and treated more like a duel between gentlemen than a total crusade. By distinguishing between "friends" and "enemies" rather than "good" and "evil," this era prevented the dehumanization of the opponent. Today, the "Nomos of the Earth" remains a
Schmitt famously laments the destruction of the European Nomos and warns of a new “nomos of the planet” dominated by American economic-technical rationality and partisan warfare. Published in 1950 (though written in the aftermath
Full title: The Nomos of the Earth in the International Law of the Jus Publicum Europaeum (German: Der Nomos der Erde im Völkerrecht des Jus Publicum Europaeum ).