What kind of state emerges from the pandemic? The pandemic caused two crises, in biosecurity and in the economy. The state was forced to tackle both; but subduing one inevitably exacerbated the other. Emerging from the impossible task of handling two conflicting crises is a new form of state, the state to come.To outline the emerging state, this book offers an in-depth critical account of the state's responses to the biosecurity and the economic crises. It is thus the first study to address both crises ensuing from the pandemic, and to synthesise the responses to them in a comprehensive account of political power. Addressing biosecurity, the book deciphers its key modalities, epistemic premises, its law, the threat it aims to oppose and the ways in which it relates to public health and society — especially its extraordinary power to suspend society. Addressing the economic crisis, the book deciphers the actuality and prospects of both the economy and the state's economic policy. It claims that economic policy is now dual: it adopts countercyclical measures to serve and entrench a neoliberal economy. The responses to the twin crises inform the outline of the emerging state: its structure, logic and legality; its power and its relation to society. This is a state of extraordinary power; but its only purpose is to preserve the social order intact. It is a despotic state: powerful, and set to impose social stasis.This work offers ground-breaking analysis based on our pandemic experience. It is indispensable for critical scholars and students in Politics, Security Studies, Sociology, Law, Political Economy and Public Health.
Christos Boukalas is a senior lecturer in Northumbria Law School. He develops a political theory of law, based on legal and state theory. His research focuses on the advent of a new form of law and state in the course of the 21st century. He has widely published critical accounts on British and American security law and policy, including the monograph Homeland Security, its Law and its State.
1. Introduction: the twin crises and the capitalist statePart I. Biosecurity2. Medical power3. The threat4. Biosecurity law5. Protect the NHS (the spectacle of public health)6. Cancel society7. The knowledge of biosecurityPart II. Economic Collapse8. Fear vs fear9. This is not a normal crisis10. The great mothball11. Sacrificial labour12. Workfare13. Pandemic distribution14. Towards a dual economy: welfare for capital, workfare for everyone elsePart III. The State to Come15. Biopolitics and threat governmentality16. From there is no alternative to whatever it takes17. The rule of law and endless pseudo-necessity18. Personal responsibility and the irresponsible state19. Neoliberal despotism20. Overcoming the order of fear21. Postscript: Pericles and the plague
José A. Brandariz, Witold Klaus, Agnieszka Martynowicz, Spain) Brandariz, Jose A. (University of A Coruna, Witold (Polish Academy of Sciences) Klaus, Agnieszka (Edge Hill University) Martynowicz
José A. Brandariz, Witold Klaus, Agnieszka Martynowicz, Spain) Brandariz, Jose A. (University of A Coruna, Witold (Polish Academy of Sciences) Klaus, Agnieszka (Edge Hill University) Martynowicz