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This book addresses recent changes in Central and Eastern Europe in order to critically consider the impact of illiberal conservatism on constitutionalism.

Right-wing populism and the illiberal constitutionalism of Central and Eastern Europe have challenged both the dominant views of legal scholars and those elements of the legal mainstream that appeared to be firmly entrenched and resistant to change. But, as this book demonstrates, in practical terms, the anti-liberal right has made use of critical methods that were originally conceived as tools for use in emancipatory and left-wing action, absorbing and utilizing a great many of the ideas associated with critical jurisprudential thought. In short, this book maintains, conservative illiberalism has taken over the role that postmodernism could have played: the role of a jester discourse relativizing the certainties and finality of liberal democracy. As the book argues, however, what this connection reveals is the necessity of a legal and political response that does not simply and hysterically reaffirm the former liberal hegemony. Rather, drawing on Foucault and post-Marxism, it articulates a concept of agonistic democracy that aims to shift the center of gravity in constitutional discourse away from any naive liberal faith in the nonpolitical.

This book will appeal to constitutional lawyers, as well as to legal and political theorists with interests in contemporary populism and liberal thought.
Introduction 1(3)
1 Assumptions, explanations, standpoint
4(30)
1.1 Constitutionalism as a discourse
4(11)
1.2 The (semi)peripheral perspective
15(11)
1.3 A post-Marxist critical approach
26(8)
2 (Demo-)liberal constitutionalism---genealogy and hegemony
34(30)
2.1 Revolution---Westernization-Americanization
34(10)
2.2 The Enlightenment and the theological roots of hegemonic solutions
44(8)
2.3 Hegemony
52(12)
3 The crisis of (demo-)liberal constitutionalism
64(27)
3.1 The crisis---attempts at a diagnosis
64(13)
3.2 Illiberalism---a (semi)peripheral version
77(5)
3.3 The dispute over the nature of illiberal constitutionalism
82(9)
4 COVID-19 as a Derridean specter
91(19)
4.1 Hauntology and biopolitics
91(5)
4.2 The pandemic---exceptional solutions and the illiberal narrative
96(7)
4.3 The pandemic and panopticism
103(7)
5 The reaction and possible future developments
110(16)
5.1 Hysteria and the metaphysical defense of a phantasm
110(7)
5.2 Scenarios
117(9)
Conclusion 126(5)
Index 131
Adam Sulikowski is full Professor of Legal Theory and Philosophy of Law at the Faculty of Law, Administration and Economics of the University of Wrocaw, Poland.