Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Dr Emil Archambault's Qualifications (3)

B.A. (Hons) in Western Society and Culture, Major in Political Science
Level 6 - Undergraduate Degree (e.g. BA/BSc), Graduate Certificate/Diploma

Status Complete
Part Time No
Years 2010 - 2014
Awarding Institution Concordia University

MPhil in International Political Theory
Level 7 - Postgraduate Masters (MA/MSc), Undergraduate Integrated Masters (e.g. MEng), Postgraduate Diploma/Certificates (e.g. PGCE)

Status Complete
Part Time No
Years 2014 - 2016
Project Title Existence and Political Order: Carl Schmitt's Concept of Enmity
Project Description This thesis provides a comprehensive study of the development of the concept of enmity in the thought of Carl Schmitt. I argue that the concept of enmity provides the foundation upon which all of Schmitt's writings on international theory build. By attending to the concept of enmity, it is therefore possible to clarify Schmitt's understanding of international order, of war and peace, and of political existence. Additionally, I seek to demonstrate in this thesis the consistency of Schmitt's thought throughout his career, as well as the necessity of understanding his political theory through his historical context.
The first part of this thesis examines the foundations of Schmitt's concept of the political, and argues that the link of the political to order follows naturally from the ontological assumption of a plural world and of a potentially violent human nature. Additionally, it argues that political enmity therefore must bear a relation to order, thereby excluding absolute enmity from the domain of the political. An examination of total war follows, arguing that Schmitt associates the political with defensive total war, against the danger of offensive total war. The latter part of this thesis turns to Schmitt's historical discussion of enmity. First, it is argued that the bracketing of war and enmity in the jus publicum Europaeum relied necessarily on the externalisation of European enmity into a distinct, free space, namely the Americas and Africa. Second, I demonstrate that changes in the form of enmity brought about by European, colonial, and global transformationscaused the collapse of the jus publicum Europaeum. I conclude this thesis by arguing for an interest in conceptions of global peace respecting the dynamic character of the political rather than seeking to depoliticise global order.
Awarding Institution University of St Andrews

PhD Government and International Affairs
Level 8 - Doctorate Degrees (PhD/DPhil)

Status Complete
Part Time No
Years 2017 - 2021
Project Title Making Drone Violence Strategic: A Conceptual Genealogy of Remote Warfare
Awarding Institution University of Durham
Director of Studies John Williams