End of Law Podcast

End of Law

The End of Law Podcast.

Episodes

  1. 12/19/2023

    4: Between Kant and Hegel: Alexandre Kojève and the End of Law

    This is the fourth episode of the End of law podcast and consist of a lecture by professor Jeff Love. It was recorded on 1 June 2021 as part of the Law, Theology and Culture seminar in Lund. Jeff Love is Research Professor of German and Russian at Clemson University and the author of several books including The Black Circle: A Life of Alexandre Kojève (Columbia University Press, 2018) and translations of among other authors Kojéve and Schelling. The epsisode starts with a short introduction by Mårten Björk and then professor Love's lecture on Alexandre Kojève. In his lecture Love focuses on the Kantian and Hegelian aspects of Kojève's work, especially in relation to his posthumously published treatise Outline of a Phenomenology of Right. In this work Kojève expounds a comprehensive theory of justice and the universal homogeneous state that promises to usher in the end of history and perhaps of law itself. Love examines some of the central legal features of Kojève's universal and homogeneous state and consider whether Kojève actually affirms that history can be brought to an end through a final legal regime or not. This podcast is produced by the End of Law research project in collaboration with the At the End of the World research programme. Producer is Joel Kuhlin and the music is by Simon Hansson. If you would like to contact the podcast, you’re welcome to send an email to tormod.otter.johansen@law.gu.se

    1h 11m
  2. 11/15/2023

    3: Political Realism in Apocalyptic Times

    This is the third episode of the End of law podcast. In this episode Tormod Johansen and Jayne Svenungsson talks to Alison McQueen, political scientist working at Stanford University. We discussed her 2018 book Political Realism in Apocalyptic Times. In the book McQueen discusses three important political realists – Niccolò Machiavelli, Thomas Hobbes, and Hans Morgenthau – who all in their respective eras engaged with and in different ways reacted to and used apocalypticism. The first part of the episode is a short introduction by Aaron Goldman of the At the End of the World research programme organising this talk. After that the discussion between McQueen, Svenungsson and Johansen follow, which ranged from the concept of apocalypticism, the dangers and potentials of apocalyptic imaginaries, and different aspects of the relation between religious and secular understandings of politics and apocalypse. A couple of books mentioned in the episode: Hobbes, Thomas Leviathan or The Matter, Forme and Power of a Commonwealth Ecclesiasticall and Civil (1651) McQueen, Alison Political Realism in Apocalyptic Times (Cambridge University Press, 2018) Svenungsson, Jayne Divining History: Prophetism, Messianism and the Development of the Spirit (Berghahn Books, 2016) This podcast is produced by the End of Law research project in collaboration with the At the End of the World research programme. Producer is Joel Kuhlin and the music is by Simon Hansson. If you would like to contact the podcast, you’re welcome to send an email to tormod.otter.johansen@law.gu.se

    1h 8m
  3. 10/19/2023

    2: Emergency Powers in Public Law: The Legal Politics of Containment

    This is the second episode of the End of Law-podcast. In this episode I talked to Karin Loevy about her 2016 book Emergency Powers in Public Law: The Legal Politics of Containment. Karin Loevy is a legal scholar working at the NYU School of Law and a researcher at the Institute for International Law and Justice. She also teaches international law at The New School, New York. Following the themes of her book she works on the theory and history of emergency powers and related topics in comparative and global public law. Lately she has focused on the history of international law in the Middle East in the period leading to the mandate system, focusing on territoriality. I was joined by friend of the show, Przemysław Tacik, assistant professor at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Poland and director of the Nomos: Centre for International Research on Law, Culture and Power. Przemek is a philosopher and legal scholar, who has among other topics worked on sovereignty, self-determination and human rights. Our discussion ranged from fundamental theoretical issues to concrete cases and historical events, in the Americas, Europe and Asia. An important issue was the tension between a juridical and a political understanding of emergencies and the interplay between them. This tied into the role of courts and the tendency of deference towards the executive branches. We also covered the potential for theories of emergency in general, the development since the book was published, as well as looking into the future in this time of continued crises and emergencies. Works mentioned or referenced in the episode: Bandopadhyay, S., All is Well: Catastrophe and the Making of the Normal State (Oxford University Press, 2022) Stacey, J., The Constitution of the Environmental Emergency (Hart Publishing, 2018) Dyzenhaus, D. ‘The Politics of the Question of Constituent Power’, in Loughlin M. and Walker, N. ed., The Paradox of Constitutionalism: Constituent Power and Constitutional Form (OUP, 2007) 129-45; Dyzenhaus, D.,‘The Compulsion of Legality’ in Ramraj V.V. ed., Emergencies and the Limits of Legality (Cambridge University Press, 2008). Agamben, G. State of exception. (University of Chicago Press, 2008) This episode was produced by Joel Kuhlin and the music is by Simon Hansson. This podcast is produced by the End of Law research project in collaboration with the At the End of the World research programme.

    1h 9m

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The End of Law Podcast.