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States of Emergency in Liberal Democracies Nomi Claire Lazar (Assistant Professor, University of Chicago)

States of Emergency in Liberal Democracies By Nomi Claire Lazar (Assistant Professor, University of Chicago)

States of Emergency in Liberal Democracies by Nomi Claire Lazar (Assistant Professor, University of Chicago)


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Summary

In an emergency, statesmen concentrate power and suspend citizens' rights. This book shows that these emergency powers reflect a plurality of norms and of modes of power that are continuous between normalcy and emergency. Recognizing this shows how liberal-democratic values can remain in force, even in times of urgency.

States of Emergency in Liberal Democracies Summary

States of Emergency in Liberal Democracies by Nomi Claire Lazar (Assistant Professor, University of Chicago)

In an emergency, statesmen concentrate power and suspend citizens' rights. These emergency powers are ubiquitous in the crisis government of liberal democracies, but their nature and justification is poorly understood. Based on a pluralist conception of political ethics and political power, this book shows how we can avoid the dangers and confusions inherent in the norm/exception approach that dominates both historical and contemporary debate. The book shows how liberal values need never - indeed must never - be suspended, even in times of urgency. Only then can accountability remain a live possibility. But at the same time, emergency powers can sometimes be justified with reference to extra-liberal norms that also operate in times of normalcy. By emphasizing the continuity between times of normalcy and emergency, the book illuminates the norms of crisis government, broadening our understanding of liberal democratic government and of political ethics in the process.

States of Emergency in Liberal Democracies Reviews

'There are few problems more important in the present constitutional universe than those surrounding the notion of 'emergency powers'. Nomi Lazar has written an outstanding book, with particularly helpful analyses both of the Roman dictatorship and of the thought of the most important theorist of the consequences of emergencies, Carl Schmitt. It deserves wide readership and discussion.' Sanford Levinson, University of Texas at Austin
'Challenging theorists who contend that emergencies require the suspension of ordinary legality and theorists who contend that liberal theory cannot tolerate deviations from ordinary legality even during emergencies, Nomi Claire Lazar integrates emergencies into a pluralist liberalism, in which informal norms and especially politics of an ordinary sort regulate the exercise of power during emergencies. Her thoughtful and provocative thesis is an important contribution to scholarship on emergencies and liberalism.' Mark Tushnet, Harvard Law School
'This important and timely work argues that emergency powers should not be regarded as 'exceptions' from norms, but rather should be understood as continuous with the normative structure in liberal democracies. Lazar takes issue both with 'norm/exception' dichotomists who leave emergency powers morally unmoored, and with those liberals who reject their use even at the risk of state collapse. Instead, Lazar forcefully demonstrates that emergency powers can be compatible with liberal democracies, insofar as these regimes recognize order as a fundamental value in society and accept quotidian rights derogations for its sake. Drawing on historical examples, classic works in political thought, and contemporary legal and political theory, States of Emergency in Liberal Democracies is essential reading for scholars interested in the nature and institutional form of emergency powers.' Melissa Schwartzberg, Columbia University
'The book encourages us to actively discuss and evaluate emergencies and the use of emergency powers on both an ex ante and an ex post facto basis.' Redescriptions

About Nomi Claire Lazar (Assistant Professor, University of Chicago)

Nomi Claire Lazar is an Assistant Professor in the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Ottawa. Her work focuses on a number of manifestations of the relationship between institutions and human agency, spanning the history of political thought, contemporary theory, and public policy. Her writing has appeared in several edited volumes and journals, including Political Theory, Politics and Society, Constellations, and the University of Toronto Law Journal. She has served as Harper-Schmitt Collegiate Assistant Professor at the University of Chicago and Canadian Bicentennial Visiting Fellow at Yale. Dr Lazar holds a Ph.D. in Political Science (2005) from Yale University, an MA (1999) from the School of Public Policy, University College London, and an Hon BA (1998) in Philosophy from the University of Toronto. Prior to returning to graduate school, she worked in the Criminal Law Policy section of the Department of Justice, Canada.

Table of Contents

1. The problem of emergency; 2. Must exceptionalism prove the rule?; 3. Two concepts of liberalism; 4. Are rights derogations always wrong?; 5. The rule of law and the Roman dictatorship; 6. The norms of crisis government.

Additional information

NPB9780521449694
9780521449694
0521449693
States of Emergency in Liberal Democracies by Nomi Claire Lazar (Assistant Professor, University of Chicago)
New
Hardback
Cambridge University Press
2009-06-30
190
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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