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Semiotic Definition of 'Lawfare' |
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By Susan Tiefenbrun Abstract: "Lawfare" is a weapon designed to destroy the enemy by using, misusing, and abusing the legal system and the media in order to raise a public outcry against that enemy. The term "lawfare" is also a clever play on words, a pun, and a neologism that needs to be deconstructed in order to explain the linguistic and political power of the term. Semiotic theory can help unpack this play on words which creates an interesting and shocking equivalence between law and war. Semiotics is the science of signs and involves the exchange between two or more speakers through the medium of coded language and convention. Semiotics is the scientific study of communication, meaning, and interpretation. This essay applies semiotic theory to expose the meanings of the term "lawfare" and to try to interpret it. It will focus on the definition of the word and the concepts of "law" as well as their denotations and connotations. Then it will look at the different definitions of "war" in order to better understand the identity of law and war created by the term "lawfare." The linkage of law to war is most clearly manifested in the expression of a "just war" and the elaboration of the "laws of war." Both law and war enjoy power, and it is precisely this shared power that constitutes the basis of the use of lawfare as a weapon of modern asymmetrical warfare. |