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Malkopoulou on the concept of politics

Anthoula Malkopoulou has published an article on "Hermann Heller on politics: discipline, sphere and activity" in the journal “History of European Ideas”. The article examines how a leading German constitutional theorist in the 1920s envisioned the idea, practice and science of politics in terms of shared values and social cooperation.

Malkopoulou finds that Hermann Heller understood politics as a human science, since political realities are for him the result of creative human activity, that is, activity possessed with meaning. Hence, students of politics should focus as much on political activity as on the norms that should guide it. Likewise, the political is conditioned not only by conflict, caused by antagonistic social relations, but also by shared norms and rules. 

To act politically is then to turn human conflict, which is unavoidable, into social cooperation. By valuing cooperation and legality over confrontation and decisionism Heller offered a conception of politics that was diametrically opposed to that of Carl Schmitt.

Learn more on tandfonline.com

Anthoula Malkopoulou’s personal page