Ethos without nomos: the Russian–Georgian War and the post-Soviet state of exception
Author(s)
Sergei ProzorovKeywords
RussiaGeorgia
postcommunism
anomie
Giorgio Agamben
Walter Benjamin
Carl Schmitt
Political science (General)
JA1-92
Political science
J
DOAJ:Political Science
DOAJ:Law and Political Science
Ethics
BJ1-1725
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Show full item recordAbstract
This paper addresses the 2008 Russian–Georgian conflict in the context of the post-Soviet spatial order, approached in terms of Carl Schmitt's theory of nomos and Giorgio Agamben's theory of the state of exception. The ‘five-day war’ was the first instance of the violation by Russia of the integrity of the post-Soviet spatial order established in the Belovezha treaties of December 1991. While from the beginning of the postcommunist period Russia functioned as the restraining force in the post-Soviet realm, the 2008 war has made further recourse to this function impossible, plunging the post-Soviet space into the condition of anomie, or the state of exception. This paper interprets this disruptive policy in the post-Soviet space as the continuation of the domestic political process of the ‘management of anomie,’ which has characterized the entire postcommunist period. In the conclusion, we address the implications of the transformation of the international order into the ethos of anomie for rethinking the ethical dimension of global politics.Date
2010-11-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:e1abe85b7de947c1a71bda8a864fce5f10.3402/egp.v3i4.5665
1654-4951
1654-6369
https://doaj.org/article/e1abe85b7de947c1a71bda8a864fce5f