Law and Schizophrenia | Coming Soon
The book "Law and Schizophrenia: Governance in Egypt – On the Integration and Distinction Between the Rule of Law and the Police State" offers a unique contribution to political and social studies addressing the complex relationship between law and the state in the Egyptian context. Through its pages, author Ali Al-Rijal provides a critical and in-depth reading of the persistence of the police state and its contradictions with the rhetoric of the rule of law, reviewing a long history of institutional interactions and political and social challenges that have shaped the nature of governance in modern Egypt.
The book takes the reader on a journey through over a century of historical and institutional transformations, posing vital questions about the relationship between power, law, and violence. It explores how the rule of law, long a demand of Egyptian revolutions and uprisings, is often intertwined with violence rather than achieving social justice.
The author employs a blend of analytical approaches, including historical sociology and institutional theories, to illustrate how the Egyptian police state has evolved alongside attempts to establish the rule of law. The book revisits pivotal events such as the 1919 Revolution and the legal reforms of the 19th century, highlighting how colonial forces and local elites shaped this reality.
With a scholarly tone and rich research material, the book addresses topics such as property issues, states of exception, the role of military tribunals, and the concept of institutional violence. It also explores the slow yet impactful changes that have shaped current practices, emphasizing models of institutional change, such as displacement, drift, and reinterpretation, to accommodate shifts in the system of governance.
This work provides an insightful and thought-provoking reading for any researcher or reader interested in understanding the roots and consequences of the complexities that define the structure of power and law in Egypt. Through deep and well-documented analysis, the book reflects the challenges of achieving justice and the rule of law amidst the contradictions of a centralized police state that professes the rule of law yet practices its opposite in many areas of governance.
"Law and Schizophrenia: Governance in Egypt" is not merely an academic study; it is a living testimony to the paradoxes of governance in a state with a long authoritarian history and an open question about the possibility of achieving integration between the rule of law and the police state in Egypt