ABSTRACT

Carl Schmitt's work attempts to legitimize the expansion of the national socialist Reich. His work has been reported in the British newspapers: the Daily Mail and the Times, which provides 'a trustworthy guide' and a 'precise definition' of Hitler's aims in Eastern Europe. Schmitt argues that the liberal thought attempts to displace the political into the spheres of economics and morality. The action of the Fuhrer lent the concept of Reich political reality, historical truth and a great future in international law. Geojurisprudence is a school that attempts to integrate the insights of law and geopolitics during the late Weimar and Nazi years. The Second World War extends the global power of the United States and marks its decisive rejection of continental isolation in favor of global interventionism. The biopolitical nature of the new spatialization of the political for Schmitt inherent the concept of space around which it was built.