The State secret is truly the secret of a temple: the profanes shall not move close to it. Carlo Levi, Paura della libert a [Fear of Freedom]. 1 In November 2011, the President of the European Union (EU), Manuel Barroso, quoted the following: 'Europe will be forged in crises, and will be the sum of the solutions adopted for those crises,' adding, 'This still holds true today. Although the truth is also that today we are probably facing the most serious crisis in the history of European integration'. 2 This statement falls along a long series of crisis announcements which surfaced more markedly in the aftermath of the economic crisis of 2008. Scholars interested in contemporary politics, whether political scientists, sociologists or anthropologists, have dedicated plenty to understanding the ways 'crisis' works in this epoch. 3 Being natural disasters (earthquakes, droughts, floods), political turmoil (electoral impasse, electoral meddling), financial meltdowns (EU in 2008, 2013) or medical emergencies (HIV, bird flu (H5N1), mental illnesses), the category of crisis has come to occupy an eminent place in social science discussions and in matters of governance. Terrorism, starting from the events of September 2001 in the United States, was instrumental in the framing of governance as being challenged by impeding crisis, which situates states and their governments in emergencies. Between 2015 and 2017, the French government extended multiple times the 'state of emergency' (hinting at its use also amidst popular protests (such as the Gilets Jaunes in 2018), an event that has no precedent since the Second World War. Indeed, it had no precedents even when one looks at the historical window of terrorist attacks during the 1970s and 1980s, for instance in the operations carried out by Ilich Ram ırez Sanchez, also known as Carlos the Jackal. Nonetheless, crisis operates beyond immediate concerns over security as in the case of terrorism. It applies to the framing and understanding of migration, economics (debt and austerity) or the environment (climate change, water shortages) and other fields of everyday governance. For instance, the Italian government declared a state of emergency in the wake of the 2016 earthquake that hit its central regions of Marche, Abruzzo and Umbria. This enabled the government to request an ease on the EU budgetary restriction and access extrabudgetary monies. Similarly, Italy has on several occasions stressed that it should be given an exceptional status, as it faces a refugee crisis, again permitting the unlocking of financial resources otherwise unavailable. The justification, in both cases, came under the necessity to face the crisis, which could not be dealt with by normal means and which, therefore, enabled governments to play beyond the agreed rules and restrictions of the EU. Lastly, Donald J. Trump's use of 'emergency funds' to bypass legislative obstacles against his 2016 electoral pledge of building the wall along the US-Mexico border confirms that the notion of crisis stands now at t...