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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter August 27, 2015

Legal Systemology and the Geopolitics of Roman Law: A Response to Stuart Elden’s Critique of Carl Schmitt’s Spatial Ontology

  • Luca Siliquini-Cinelli

    Luca Siliquini-Cinelli is a Lecturer and Chair of the Contract and Commercial Law Units at Deakin Law School, Australia. Prior to joining Deakin, he was a Visiting Researcher and Lecturer at the Department of Private Law and Centre for Comparative Law in Africa, University of Cape Town. He is also the recipient of the 2013 Avv. Paolo Catalano Award and the 2013 Dott. Gian Luca Innocenti Award as the top candidate at the Bar exam (Court of Appeal of Turin). Dr. Siliquini-Cinelli main fields of interest are political and legal theory, political theology, EU, comparative, public and private law (contracts and torts), and post-national governance. His papers have been published in leading law journals in Europe, the US, South Africa, and Australia.

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From the journal Pólemos

Abstract

This paper explores the production, destruction, and reproduction of the geopolitical spaces of Roman law in order to offer an analysis of Schmitt’s (selective) notion of Jus Publicum Europaeum and its relevance to the current “depoliticization” and “dejuridification” of the world. By adopting a historical and geopolitical approach that reaches the boundaries of legal systemology and political theology, the present contribution investigates the manipulative and instrumentalist use of the material object of Rome’s (universalist) competence, namely the “territory” as dominium of its political intervention, which was ultimately (and idealistically) aimed at avoiding the natural destiny of any living being: birth, maturity, and death. Attention is therefore paid to the Roman strategy of (ontological?) contamination of its mythical identity through the legal and sociopolitical administration and regulation of its geographical spaces in terms of (non-)cultural signification. Through the analysis of such concepts as “nomos,” “Großraum,” “Ortung,” and “Ordnung,” it is claimed that Schmitt voluntarily chose to identify the Jus Publicum Europaeum with the geopolitical order produced during the Age of Discovery and not with the “comprehensive” Roman spatial order. The reason for this choice may be identified in the distortive use of Rome’s social relations and political allegiances that lay at the core of its genealogical expansionism (and subsequent inevitable dissolution) since the conquest of Veius in 396 BC and the historical compromise between patrician nobility and plebeians in 367 BC.

About the author

Luca Siliquini-Cinelli

Luca Siliquini-Cinelli is a Lecturer and Chair of the Contract and Commercial Law Units at Deakin Law School, Australia. Prior to joining Deakin, he was a Visiting Researcher and Lecturer at the Department of Private Law and Centre for Comparative Law in Africa, University of Cape Town. He is also the recipient of the 2013 Avv. Paolo Catalano Award and the 2013 Dott. Gian Luca Innocenti Award as the top candidate at the Bar exam (Court of Appeal of Turin). Dr. Siliquini-Cinelli main fields of interest are political and legal theory, political theology, EU, comparative, public and private law (contracts and torts), and post-national governance. His papers have been published in leading law journals in Europe, the US, South Africa, and Australia.

Published Online: 2015-8-27
Published in Print: 2015-9-18

©2015 by De Gruyter

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