5 6093460902462357526 PDF
5 6093460902462357526 PDF
5 6093460902462357526 PDF
Research Institute
Teaching Material
On
JURISPRUDENCE
PREPARED BY
Daniel W/Gebriel
Hassen Mohamed
2008
Table of Contents
i
3.1.2 Morality of Aspiration and of Duty ............................................................... 35
3.1.3 Fuller’s Law Making Criteria ........................................................................ 37
3.1.4 The Inner Morality of Law ............................................................................ 39
3.1.5 Criticisms on Fuller....................................................................................... 41
3.2 Substantive Natural Law: John Finnis ............................................................ 42
3.2.1 Introduction .................................................................................................. 42
3.2.2 Finnis’ Defence of Naturalism ...................................................................... 42
3.2.3 The Basic Goods of Human Nature ............................................................... 43
2.3.4 Evaluation ..................................................................................................... 44
UNIT FOUR ............................................................................ 46
POSITIVISM .......................................................................... 46
Introduction .............................................................................................................. 46
Objectives ................................................................................................................ 47
The Command Theory: John Austin’s Positivism ................................................ 48
Introduction .............................................................................................................. 48
Objectives ................................................................................................................ 48
4.1. Influence of David Hume ................................................................................ 48
4.2. Jeremy Bentham ............................................................................................. 50
4.3 John Austin on Positivism and Separation thesis ......................................... 52
4.3.1 Positive Law and Positive Morality ............................................................... 52
4.3.2 Austin’s Concept of law ................................................................................ 54
4.3.3 The Separation Thesis ................................................................................... 58
4.3.4 Criticism on Austin ....................................................................................... 60
Questions for Discussion ....................................................................................... 62
4.4 Pure Theory of Law: Hans Kelsen .................................................................. 64
Introduction ........................................................................................................... 64
Objective ............................................................................................................... 64
Pure Theory of Law ............................................................................................... 64
Questions for Discussion ....................................................................................... 68
4.5 H L A Hart- The Concept of Law..................................................................... 69
Introduction ........................................................................................................... 69
Objectives.............................................................................................................. 69
4.5.1 Hart’s Concept of Rules ................................................................................ 69
4.5.2. Dworkin’s criticism on Hart/Positivism........................................................ 79
4.5.3. Law and Morality: Hart/Devlin debate ......................................................... 83
Questions for Discussion ........................................................................................... 93
4.6. Summary .......................................................................................................... 94
UNIT FIVE .............................................................................. 95
HISTORICAL AND SOCIOLOGICAL LEGAL THEORY .............. 95
Introduction .............................................................................................................. 95
Objectives ................................................................................................................ 95
5.1 Historical School ............................................................................................... 96
5.1.1 The Spirit of the People: Savigny .................................................................. 96
5.1.2 The Changing process of Ancient Law: Henry Maine ................................... 97
5.2 Sociological School ........................................................................................ 100
5.2.1 Living Law: Eugen Ehrlich ......................................................................... 100
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5.2.2 Law in Action: Roscoe Pound ..................................................................... 103
UNIT SIX ............................................................................. 116
LEGAL REALISM .................................................................. 116
Introduction ............................................................................................................ 116
Objectives .............................................................................................................. 117
American Realists ................................................................................................. 118
6.1 Pragmatist approach ....................................................................................... 118
6.2. Law as prophesy of the court: Oliver W. Holmes .......................................... 119
6.3 Centrality of the judge: John Chipman Gray................................................... 121
6.4. Rule Skepticism: Karl Llewellyn................................................................... 124
6.5. Fact Skepticism: Jerome Frank...................................................................... 127
Questions for Discussion ..................................................................................... 129
PART TWO ........................................................................... 130
UNIT SEVEN......................................................................... 131
RADICAL LEGAL THEORIES ................................................. 131
7.1. Critical Legal Studies ................................................................................ 131
7.1.1 Introduction ................................................................................................ 131
7.1.2. The Critique of the Liberal Legal Tradition ................................................ 133
7.1.3 An attack on formalism ............................................................................. 135
7.1.4 Critique of legal reasoning .................................................................... 137
7.1.5 Contradictions in the law ........................................................................... 138
7.1.6 Deconstruction: trashing, delegitimation and dereification............... 140
7.1.7 The constitutive theory of law ................................................................... 143
7.2. Critical Legal Studies and Feminist Legal Theory .................................. 144
7.2. Postmodern Legal Theory ...................................................................... 147
7.3.1 Introduction ............................................................................................... 147
7.3.2 A Critique of the Enlightenment.................................................................. 148
7.3.3 LYOTARD AND FOUCAULT .................................................................. 150
7.3.4 Identity and the 'Other' ............................................................................. 152
7.3.5 Postmodernism and Fundamental Values .................................................... 154
7.3.6 Derrida and Deconstruction ........................................................................ 156
UNIT EIGHT ......................................................................... 162
JUSTICE ............................................................................... 162
8.1 Introduction ..................................................................................................... 162
8.2. Objectives ...................................................................................................... 163
8.3 John Rawls: Justice as Fairness................................................................... 163
8.4 Will Kymlicka: Justice and Minority Rights................................................... 166
8.4.1 Self-government Rights .............................................................................. 167
8.4.2. Polyethnic Rights ....................................................................................... 168
8.4.3. Special representation right ........................................................................ 169
8.5. The Equality Argument ................................................................................. 170
8.6 The Role of Historical Agreements ............................................................... 171
8.7 Rawls Revisited .............................................................................................. 173
QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION....................................................................... 175
CHAPTER NINE .................................................................... 176
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LIBERTY............................................................................... 176
9.1 Introduction ..................................................................................................... 176
9.2. Objectives ...................................................................................................... 177
9.3. Isaiah Berlin: Two Concepts of Liberty........................................................ 177
9.3.1 The Notion of 'Negative' Freedom............................................................... 177
9.3.2 The Notion of Positive Freedom.................................................................. 181
9.4 Charles Taylor: What’s wrong with Negative Liberty? ................................ 183
QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION....................................................................... 190
CHAPTER TEN ...................................................................... 191
EQUALITY ............................................................................ 191
10.1 Introduction ................................................................................................... 191
10.2 Objectives ..................................................................................................... 191
10.3 Equality: Defining the Concept.................................................................... 192
10.4 Principles of Equality and Justice ............................................................... 194
10.4.1 Formal Equality ........................................................................................ 196
10.4.2 Proportional Equality ................................................................................ 196
10.4.3 Moral Equality .......................................................................................... 198
10.4.4 Presumption of Equality ............................................................................ 201
10.5 Conceptions of Distributive Equality: Equality of What?........................... 206
10.5.1 Simple Equality and Objections to Equality in General ............................. 206
10.5.2 Libertarianism ........................................................................................... 212
10.5.3 Utilitarianism ............................................................................................ 213
10.5.4 Equality of Welfare ................................................................................... 214
10.5.5 Equality of Resources ............................................................................... 215
10.5.6 Equality of Opportunity for Welfare or Advantage .................................... 217
10.5.7 Capabilities Approaches ............................................................................ 218
10.6 Equality Among Whom? .............................................................................. 219
10.7 The Value of Equality: Why Equality? ........................................................ 221
Questions For Discussion .................................................................................... 227
REFERENCES ....................................................................... 244
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Acknowledgments
We would like to extend our deepest gratitude to the FDRE Justice and Legal Research
Institute for giving us the chance to prepare this material. Our gratitude also goes to the
editors and readers of the material for their effort and insightful comments. Finally we
appreciate the cooperation and encouragements made by our faculties, friends and staff
members of Bahir Dar and Mekelle Univeristies.
COURSE INTRODUCTION
This is an introductory approach aimed mainly at law students who are just embarking on
a course in the philosophy of law or jurisprudence. As such, its purpose is to introduce
the kinds of argument which have been prominent throughout the history of law, to give a
student new to the area the feel for the connection between morality and law, justice and
law, role of law in society etc. It, moreover, deals with analyzing and reflecting on the
nature of law, source of law, legal institutions, the relation between law and society, etc.
The module is presented in two parts, each of which covers one of the main areas in
which philosophical analysis has been prominent. Each of the chapters into which these
parts are divided is followed by a set of study questions and selections for suggested
further discussion issues dealt with in that chapter. The questions can be used in various
ways. The main point is to indicate the kind of questions a student should be able to
discuss at each stage of the material.
Part I covers crucial points in the history and present state of legal theory, from natural
law theory to positivism and the emergence of legal realism. In this part, different
theories of law advocated by various school of jurisprudence will be discussed. Part II
deals with other fundamental legal principles or ideas, such as enforcement of morality,
theory of justice, liberty, and freedom. This connects the crucial areas of legal validity
with disputes over the relation between morality and law, the controversial topics of
personal privacy and limits of liberty.
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In doing so, a wide range of legal thinkers, like Plato, Aristotle, from ancient Greek;
Cicero and Seneca from Rome; St. Thomas Aquinas, Bentham, Mill and Austin from
middle ages; Kelsen, Fuller, and Holmes from the 20th century; and Hart, Devlin, Berlin,
Rawles and Dworkin, from more recent times of legal theory will be examined. This is
an exemplary introduction to the subject, complete with study questions to help students
focus and deepen their understanding.
COURSE OBJECTIVES
The study of jurisprudence affords an opportunity to stand back a little from the detail of
substantive law and to consider the nature, purpose and operation of law as a whole. This
course generally focuses on the discussion of main stream legal theories starting from
classical natural law theory to the theory of justice and liberty of the 20th century. As
such, its objectives are:
• To introduce the kinds of arguments raised in relation to the nature and source of
law
• To enable students to understand the nature and function of law.
• To give the student the insight into the connection between legal theory and legal
practice.
• To show the relationship between law and other values, such as, morality and
justice
• To enable students to reflect and understand what they are expected to do and
what their role is within society.
3
PART ONE
UNIT ONE
GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS
Introduction
Jurisprudence has been serving as a general philosophic approach to students who are
expected to understand the nature of law and its basic significance in society. The
purpose of this chapter is hence to give students highlights about jurisprudence and the
aim of studying the course. This will serve students as a base to understand the higher
level of the philosophy which is the subject matter of this module.
Objectives
After reading this introductory chapter, students will able to:
• Understand the concept and role of jurisprudence
• See why we need to study jurisprudence
The word comes from the Latin term juris prudentia, which means "the study,
knowledge, or science of law." This signifies that like any other social study, law can also
be studied scientifically or systematically. In modern law jurisprudence is understood as a
term that embraces spectrum of questions about the nature and purpose of law and
responses made to them.
Jurisprudence has many aspects, with four types being the most common. The most
prevalent form of jurisprudence is that it seeks to analyze, explain, classify, and criticize
entire bodies of law, ranging from contract to tort to constitutional law. Legal
encyclopedias, law reviews, and law school textbooks frequently contain this type of
jurisprudential scholarship.
5
The second type of jurisprudence compares and contrasts law with other fields of
knowledge such as literature, economics, religion, and the social sciences. The purpose of
this interdisciplinary study is to enlighten each field of knowledge by sharing insights
that have proved important to understanding essential features of the comparative
disciplines.
The third type of jurisprudence raises fundamental questions about the law itself. These
questions seek to reveal the historical, moral, and cultural underpinnings of a particular
legal concept. The Common Law (1881), written by Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., is a
well-known example of this type of jurisprudence. It traces the evolution of civil and
criminal responsibility from undeveloped societies where liability for injuries was based
on subjective notions of revenge, to modern societies where liability is based on objective
notions of reasonableness.
The fourth and fastest-growing body of jurisprudence focuses on even more abstract
questions, including, what is law? What is its relation to justice and morality? What is the
role of a judge? Is a judge more like a legislator who simply decides a case in favor of the
most politically preferable outcome? What is justice? What is liberty and freedom?
At a professional level, jurisprudence is the way lawyers and judges reflect on what they
do and what their role is within society. This truth is reflected by the way jurisprudence is
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taught as part of a university education in the law, where law is considered not merely as
a trade to be learned (like carpentry or fixing automobiles) but as an intellectual pursuit.
For those who believe that only the reflective life is worth living, and who also spend
most of their waking hours working within (or around) the legal system, there are strong
reasons to want to think deeply about the nature and function of law, the legal system,
and the legal profession.
Finally, for some, jurisprudence is interesting and enjoyable on its own, whatever its
other uses and benefits. There will always be some for whom learning is interesting and
valuable in itself, even if it does not lead to greater wealth, greater self-awareness, or
greater social progress.
There are many schools of jurisprudence which concentrate on the nature and function of
law. For our practical purpose we shall confine ourselves to the treatment of the most
important schools. Hence, in this material the following schools shall be discussed
briefly.
Natural Law School: the oldest school of jurisprudence, it upholds that beyond, and
superior to the law made by man are certain higher principles, the principles of natural
law. These principles are immutable and eternal. With regard to the highest matter man-
made law should be in accord with the principles of natural law. And to the extent that
man-made law conflicts with natural law, it lacks validity: it is not a valid, binding law at
all.
Legal Positivism: also called Analytical School of jurisprudence, it holds that there is no
higher law than that created by governments, legitimate or self imposing, and that such
law must be obeyed, even if it appears unjust or otherwise at odds with the “natural” law.
Unlike the natural law theory, this one treats law and other values, such as, morality and
religion separately.
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Historical School: this school of jurisprudence views law as an evolutionary process and
concentrates on the origin and history of the legal system. The law of a nation, like its
language, originates in the popular spirit, the common conviction of right, and has
already attained a fixed character, peculiar to that people, before the earliest time to
which authentic history extends. In this prehistoric period the laws, language, manners
and political constitution of a people are inseparably united and they are the particular
faculties and tendencies of an individual people bound together by their kindred
consciousness of inward necessity.
Sociological School: Unlike the Historical School that conceives a nation’s law as tied to
the primitive consciousness of its people, sociological conception of law locate the law in
the present-day institutions of its society. The proponents of sociological jurisprudence
seek to view law within a broad social context rather than as an isolated phenomenon
distinct from and independent of other means of social control. The sociological
questions in jurisprudence are concerned with the actual effects of the law upon the
complex of attitudes, behaviour, organization, environment, skills, and powers involved
in the maintenance of a particular society. They are also concerned with the practical
improvement of the legal system and feel that this can be achieved only if legislation and
court adjudications take into account the findings of other branches of learning,
particularly the social sciences.
Legal Realism conceives law as judge made and by doing so it puts the court at the
center. It contends that positive law cannot be applied in the abstract, rather, judges
should take into account the specific circumstances of each case, as well as economic and
sociological realities. In other words, the law should not be static, it must adapt to various
social and economic realities. This theory emphasizes the role of the judge, that is it
emphasizes that law is made not found, and considers judges as the true law makers.
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UNIT TWO
Introduction
Natural law theory is one of the jurisprudential approaches to law. It generally advocates
that some laws are basic and fundamental to human nature and are discoverable by
human reason without reference to specific legislative enactments or judicial decisions.
The concept of natural law originated in Greece and received its most important
formulation in Stoicism. The Stoics believed that the fundamental moral principles that
underlie all the legal systems of different nations were reducible to the dictates of natural
law. This idea became particularly important in Roman legal theory, which eventually
came to recognize a common code regulating the conduct of all peoples and existing
alongside the individual codes of specific places and times. Christian philosophers such
as St. Thomas Aquinas perpetuated this idea, asserting that natural law was common to
all peoples—Christian and non-Christian alike—while adding that revealed law gave
Christians an additional guide for their actions. In modern times, the theory of natural law
became the chief basis for the development by Hugo Grotius of the theory of
international law. Later writers and philosophers continued to consider natural law as the
basis of ethics and morality. The influence of natural law theory declined greatly in the
19th century under the impact of Positivism. In the 20th century, however, such thinkers
as Lon L. Fuller saw in natural law a necessary intellectual opposition to totalitarian
theories.
For practical reasons in this unit we shall confine ourselves to the investigation of the
Greeks, Stoics, and the Middle Age Christian Fathers. In the next chapter, where we
investigate the downfall of natural law theory, we will also look at Lon L. Fuller in the
Revival of Natural Law Theory.
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Objectives
After reading this unit students will be able to:
• Understand the notion of natural law
• Explain the classical approaches to natural law theory
• Identify the relation between law and morality, law and justice, and law and
religious rules
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2.1 The Notion of Natural Law
Let’s suppose that a fair-haired child returns from school one day and says to
his father
Child: Mr. Smith (the head master of the school) has made a new rule. No
children with fair hair are to get arithmetic lessons. They are to do extra
woodwork instead. I think it’s stupid,
Father: Wow
Child: After all, we’re at school to learn aren’t we? How can I do what I’m
there for if I get arithmetic?
Father: Well, it seems unfortunate, I agree. But Mr. Smith is the head
master. He makes the rules. What he says goes.
Child: But surely, he can’t make a rule like that? I mean, it goes against what
the school is for. The school governors wouldn’t allow it. It can’t really be a
rule at all, can it?
Father: Um!
Child: Well, I don’t think it is a rule. It can’t be.
Father: And do you intend to disobey it?
Child: Um!
The views expressed by the child bear a degree of resemblance to those held by one who
believes in the doctrine of natural law. The adherent of natural law believes that beyond,
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?
and superior to the law made by man are certain higher principles, the principles of
natural law.
What do you think is meant by natural law? What is natural about it?
In dealing with this matter we must explain first that ‘natural law’ is not to be understood
as meaning the same as the law of nature – in the sense of laws that govern the physical
world. Also distinct must be kept with the notion of a ‘state of nature’, indicating the
condition in which man lived, or is by some philosophers supposed to have lived (e.g.
Hobbes & Locke), before the birth of ordered society.
The word ‘natural’, in natural law, refers to an idea that provides the foundation of
natural law – namely the reason why natural law ought to be obeyed. The idea is this.
Man is part of nature. Within nature, man has his own nature. His nature inclines him
towards certain ends – to procreate children, to protect his family, to ensure his survival.
To seek such ends is natural to him. Those things which assist the achieving of such ends
assist the purpose of nature. Thus laws that further the achievement by man of his natural
ends assist the achievement of the purpose of nature. Such laws, laws that are in accord
with the ultimate purpose of man, constitute natural law. Natural law is thus that which
furthers the attainment by men of the ends that nature has made it man’s nature to seek to
achieve.
To elaborate it in negative explanation we can also put it in the following way. Those
things which impede man attaining his natural ends are contrary to natural law. Thus, if a
man-made law obstructs the achievement by man of what has been decreed by nature as
his ends, then the law is contrary to natural law.
What does natural law consist of? What are its precepts? Natural law ordains that society
should be ordered in such a way as to assist man in fulfilling his purpose. Since violence
will impede this fulfillment, violence is contrary to natural law. Since peace assists the
fulfillment, man should honor promises, since to dishonor a promise can lead to
disharmony or even violence.
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Since man’s natural ends are the same for all mankind, and remain the same for all time,
it is natural that the principles of natural law are constant. Thus natural law comprises a
body of permanent, eternal truths, truths embodying precepts of universal applicability,
part of immutable order of things, unaffected by changing human beliefs or attitudes.
?
Assuming that you are a strong natural law follower would you obey the rules
of the school master?
2.2.1. General
Two giants whose legacy still survives in today’s world bestride through the philosophy
of the ancient world. In addition to others forms of philosophies, they contributed a lot to
the classical Hellenistic legal theory. These are Plato and Aristotle. Neither can be
described as natural jurisprudent, but in the philosophy of each we see strands that find a
place in natural law thinking as it was later to develop. In addition, we have the teacher
himself, Socrates, who transmitted some messages about his conception of laws.
2.2.2 Socrates
Socrates was one of the famous Greek philosophers who contributed a lot to the western
philosophy. In here we shall see his idea of law as recorded in Apology and Crito, two
different writings written by his pupil Plato. Apology is all about Socrates’ defense in
court, while Crito is a discourse made between Socrates and his friend Crito in prison.
Socrates was at the age of 70 when he appeared before court to defend himself. He was
prosecuted because he was said to be corrupting the youth and second he did not believe
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in the gods of the state. In Plato’s Apology, Socrates refuted the accusations made by his
opponents. Justifying his teaching of philosophy and his consistency in continuing same
work, he importantly said that it was good to obey the law and the order of a commander
so long as they are just. But if the command was illegal or the laws unjust, then no man
shall obey the order or the laws. From this argument he had also developed the principle
that the command of god is more pious and just and as a result it is above and beyond any
other human laws. Hence, it is wise to obey god’s command than human laws when they
are in conflict. He believed that he was commanded by god to teach people philosophy,
to question and convince them whenever he got the chance.
If we investigate both cases in detail we infer two main conclusions. The first principle is
that citizens must obey and uphold the positive laws. In the case of the ten generals,
Socrates simply upholds the laws. The law prohibited to try accused people together. But
the government (assembly) nevertheless ordered him to violate these laws. For Socrates,
to follow the order was unjust since it was against the Athenian laws. Thus he preferred
to obey the laws to the government. He was sticking to the rule of law. He strictly
followed the positive law and disobeyed the action of the officials which is contrary to
the written law.
? Find an article from the criminal code that shows that a subordinate should not obey
his superior if the order is illegal. Write what you understand in connection to Socrates’
view.
The second principle is that we shall obey the law if it is only a just law. Just law, for
Socrates, is measured based on the perfect laws of the gods. If the laws are unjust and
unholy we shall refuse obedience. In the case of Leon the Salamis, namely his refusal and
disobedience of the order to go to arrest Leon of Salamis fall under this conclusion.
Under the thirty’s dictatorship he was ordered, together with others, to arrest and kill this
man just for the sake of taking/stealing his property, and Socrates refused to obey the
order since the order by itself was unjust. At this time too there was a government and
this government had laws to this effect. Socrates did not say that he refused because they
were not legitimate governments. His disobedience was rather based on the idea that
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arresting Leon of Salamis with intent of putting him to death (just to expropriate his
wealth) was characterized as unjust and unholy.
A conflicting, and yet important, idea of law is found in the second writing, Crito. He
subscribed that he would obey the laws irrespective of their moral values, whether they
are just or not. Socrates was unsuccessful in his argument and was sent to prison
preceding his death. While in prison, his friend, Crito, visited him and told him that plans
were in place to prepare for his escape and journey to another country.
Socrates justified the coercive power of the state laws (positive law) and thereby
upholding and respecting the decision of the courts (not to escape from prison) on three
grounds. First, on moral grounds, in that it is bad and disgraceful to harm or to do
injustice to another. He also argued that to do injustice in return for injustice or in other
words, to return harm for harm is also bad. Thus, to do wrong to others or to return harm
for harm is both equally bad and dishonorable. Although the judges sentence him to
death, by escaping from prison he harms the laws since Socrates’ refusal would send a
message of disobedience to the laws, which truly would harm them. Other people may
follow his examples, since he is still very influential, and disobeying the laws, and as a
result, the laws would become useless. If the laws try to destroy Socrates it would not be
just for Socrates to try to destroy them in return. This will be immoral and unjust.
Secondly, Socrates analogized the power and status of laws to one’s parents, for it was
the laws which administer the marriage of his family, ordered his family about his
upbringing and education etc. It is a great evil to make wrong to parents whatever they do
to you. Similarly citizens are not justified to back-harm their country whatever harm the
country caused to them. Thirdly, there was a tacit agreement between Socrates (and other
citizens for that matter) and the state of Athens, stipulating that Socrates either obey the
laws or, when he sees the laws unjust, he should persuade the city to act in a more
suitable fashion. If he was not pleased with the laws he could move to other countries.
This means his living in the country shows that he agreed to be governed by the law of
the country.
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He summarizes his argument by stating his alternatives and the consequences of each
alternative as brought out by his argument: if he chooses to obey the court, he will die
wronged (as victim of injustice) not by the laws but by men, but if he escapes, he will
disgracefully return injustice for injustice and harm for harm, he will be breaking the
contracts and agreements he made with the laws, and he will be doing harm; to those he
must least harm, his friends, his country, and the laws. Thus, he thinks that if he obeys the
court he will be suffering but not doing injustice, whereas if he escapes he will be doing
injustice and harm.
2.2.3. Plato
In the restless intellectual and political climate of 5th-century Athens, Plato was
concerned to redefine the nature of justice by relating it to something far more permanent
and absolute than the nomos (man-made laws) of the city-state. He assigned “reality” to
the unchanging archetypal forms—i.e., the ideas—of things rather than to the ephemeral
phenomena as superficially and confusedly perceived by individual men unenlightened
by philosophy. He says that what for us are abstractions, example redness, square-ness,
roundness, sharpness, honor, courage, beauty, equality, justice each had a permanent and
unvarying existence, an existence that is independent of the fact that certain things or
actions in the world as we know them reflect the qualities themselves. This is Plato’s
doctrine of ‘forms’.
Plato’s forms are transcendental archetypes that exist independently of the physical
world, independently of the human mind, independently of space and time. Thus there is
a ‘form’ of beauty, of which things on earth which have the quality of beauty are mere
manifestations. Qualities such as justice and truth exist in their own form, too. All men
this earth can do is to attempt to reproduce them. To reproduce these qualities, men must
seek knowledge of the eternal truths, a quest that is man’s finest endeavor (for your
information, this school of thought is known as idealism). It refers to the notion that the
idea of a thing has its own existence. The chair you are sitting on may be of wood, metal,
plastic or something of a mixture. It is not perfect in design or quality. The perfect chair
16
with all essential qualities cannot be found on this earth; it exists only in the
transcendental world, a world beyond time and space.)
Since for Plato the forms of ‘goodness’, ‘virtue’, ‘honesty’ were eternal and immutable,
they constituted moral principles of universal and timeless validity existing above and
unaffected by changing human attitudes or beliefs, moral principles by reference to which
all human actions and views must be judged.
2.2.4. Aristotle
Aristotle did not subscribe to Plato's theory of forms. But there was an element in his
thinking that contributed a further strand to what was to become part of natural law
doctrine. Aristotle was concerned with the world as he saw it existing around him (as
opposed to Plato, Aristotle was materialist). He was a zoologist, in particular a marine
zoologist, with an acute observation of the minutest details of organisms observable by
the human eye. From his studies of the natural world he became conscious of the fact that
natural phenomena were in a state of perpetual change – the child growing into an adult;
the seed growing into a plant. There was always progress. Throughout the living world,
Aristotle saw that, in the birth and growth of animals and plants, the earlier stages always
lead up to a final development. Yet we should not think of this end as a termination. The
process is constant. Thus, for Aristotle the universe is dynamic, always engaged in the
process of becoming, of moving towards an end immanent within itself from the start.
For Aristotle, the highest form of human society lay in the Greek city state (a polis). It
was the Polis that provided the society in which man could achieve his culminating
fulfillment. Thus from the start of organized human society, from its most primitive
forms, through the various stages of agricultural existence to the building of cities, and
the creating of political societies such as that at Athens, mankind was progressing
towards that which had been its end from the beginning. In his book, politics, Aristotle
says, ‘Because it is the completion of associations existing by nature, every polis exists
by nature, having itself the same quality as the earlier associations from which it grew. It
is the end to which those associations move and the ‘nature’ of things consists in their
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end or consummation; what each thing is when its growth is completed, we call the
nature of that thing, whether it be a man or a horse or a family.’
Speaking otherwise, Aristotle has declared that we have two types of laws. One is natural
law, and the other man-made. The latter kind of law is not the same everywhere for the
custom and behavior of people of different nations and tribes is different. But with regard
to the former one, it is one and same for it is immutable and beyond human touch.
Moreover, the state made law is usually binding and decisive compared to the natural
law. In case of conflict between the two, Aristotle tells us to resort to the natural law:
If the written law tells against our case, clearly we must appeal to universal law,
and insist on a greater equity and justice…… We must urge that the principle of
equity are permanent and changeless, and that the universal law does not change
either, for it is the law of nature, whereas written laws often do change.
This kind of thinking makes, hence, Aristotle one of the natural law thinkers. It seems
that Aristotle accepted that there is a natural and universal right and wrong, apart from
any human ordinance or convention. For Aristotle and the men of Greek of his time, the
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existence of higher laws (natural law) is as sure enough as the existence of higher beings,
which they called ‘gods.’
Thus in Plato’s and Aristotle’s early notion of philosophy of a law higher than that of
men, we can see strands that were later, with other elements, to form the full doctrine of
natural law.
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2.3 The Stoics: Natural Law as a Reason
2.3.1 Introduction
The next steps in the history of the doctrine are to be found in the writings of certain of
the authors who form what has come to be termed the Stoic School of Philosophy.
Stoicism existed from the life time of its founder Zeno (during the 3rd century BC) down
to about the fourth century AD. It was thus the prevailing philosophy during the greater
part of the Roman Republic and Empire. The contribution of the Stoic School of
Philosophy may be represented by the writings of Cicero, Seneca, and the Emperor
Marcus Aurelius.
Three important ideas of modern law and legal theory were derived mainly from Stoic
philosophy:
The conception of a universal law for all mankind under which all men are equal;
The idea of a method of deriving universal principles of law from the observation
of the laws of different people;
And the conception of a law binding upon all states, which has got today the
name “international law”.
But what does this philosophy say in general? We recommend that you read attachment
A annexed at the end of this material before looking into this sub-section.
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2.3.2. Cicero
Cicero was a Roman orator, politician, lawyer and a Stoic philosopher. In his book On
Duties he discusses “true law”, transcending the enactments and customs of particular
nations, and identified with “right reason”, which is immanent in nature, in the universe
and in the minds of the wisest men. The following well known passage illustrates the idea
of law of Stoic philosophy:
Law is the highest reason, implanted in nature, which commands what ought to be
done and forbids the opposite. True law is right reason in agreement with nature.
To curtail this law is unholy, to amend it illicit, to repeal it impossible..the Stoic’s
ideal is to live consistently with nature. Throughout our lives we ought invariably
to aim at morally right course of action.
The universality and immutability of natural law or “true” law was indicated in another passage:
He moreover declares:
Indeed this idea – that one must not injure anybody else for one’s profit – is not only
natural law, an international valid principle: the same idea is also incorporated in the
statutes which individual communities have framed for their national purposes. The
whole point and intention of these statutes is that one citizen shall live safely with
another.
….the finest and noblest characters prefer a life of dedication to a life of self-indulgence;
and one may conclude that such men conform with nature and are therefore incapable of
doing harm to their fellow men.
For there is an ideal of human goodness: nature itself has stored and wrapped this up
inside our minds. Unfold this ideal, and you will straightaway identify the good man as
the person who helps everybody he can, and, unless wrongfully provoked, harms none
For Cicero, law is the highest product of the human mind which is in tune with the
elemental force of nature. The validity of human law depends upon its harmony with
these forces. It was the blending of the ideas of reason and law with nature that contrived
to suggest that, while it was possible for rulers to ignore the constraints of natural law,
such actions ran against the grain of the natural order of things in a way that was unholy
and blasphemous.
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2.3.3. Seneca
In his letter Seneca, another Roman lawyer and Stoic philosopher, wrote:
Man is a sprit and his ultimate goal is the perfection of his reason in that sprit. Because
man is a rational animal, his ideal state is realized when he has fulfilled the purpose for
which he was born. And what is it that reason demands of him? Something very easy –
that he live in accordance with his own nature. Yet this is turned into something difficult
by the madness that is universal among men; we push one another into vices. And how
can people be called back to spiritual well-being when no one is trying to hold them back
and the crowd is urging them on?
What has the philosopher investigated? What has the philosopher brought to light? In the
first place, truth and nature; and secondly, a rule of life, in which he has brought life into
line with things universal.
One can observe that Seneca has also emphasized the need for rational approach, i.e. that
man shall live in harmony with nature. If we were to single out the principal contribution
of Stoic’s thinking to the evolution of the doctrine of natural law, it would perhaps be its
universality. Stoics saw mankind as one brotherhood. They looked outside the city state,
outside the Empire and saw the whole of human race as being bound and united by the
brotherly love that the precept of natural law enjoined.
One can also see that the Stoics added flesh to the bones of natural law. Tolerance,
forgiveness, compassion, fortitude, uprightness, sincerity, honesty – these were the
qualities that the Stoics believed that natural law required of men. These were the
qualities that man should aspire for in order that he might live in accordance with what
nature had ordained. These qualities in many ways are the bases for the Roman law and
thereby the modern western law.
Based upon these natural law qualities, historically, compared to the Greeks, the Stoics
contributed much to the practical development of the Roman law. Greek law scarcely
survived as a system, because it never developed a class of legal specialists or abandoned
to its lay administrators or its popular tribunals of grotesque size. Roman law, on the
other hand, developed through the efforts of expert jurisconsults (learned lawyers) and
praetors (judges) into a permanent heritage of Western society. By its adoption into
works such as Cicero's De republica as well as other works of the great jurisconsults,
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Stoic speculation concerning reason and nature was brought onto the level of precepts for
concrete problem solving. The crude, tribal jus civile (“civil law”) of the Romans was
thus transformed into a natural-law-based jus gentium (law applying to all people), a set
of principles common to all nations and appropriate, therefore, equally applied for
foreigners as well as the Romans.
The parallels between the tenets of Stoicism and the teaching of Christ come readily to
mind. But Christianity offered an advantage not made available by the Stoicism or any
other religion of that time competing to fill the place left by the decline of the old state
religion of Rome. Stoicism taught that men should love one another, since this was in
accord with nature and thus was man’s duty. Christianity taught – ‘Love one another’,
and it added ‘and if you do, there is a reward – life everlasting.
The teaching of Christ provided a code of conduct, but not a comprehensive theology.
The creation of the latter was the accomplishment of the fathers of the church, principally
St. Augustine and St. Thomas Aquinas. Having been born into the Roman world it was
natural that these men should reflect in their writings aspects of the philosophies of
Greece and Rome that could be enlisted to give intellectual support to the teachings of the
new church.
The incorporation of natural law into Christian theology was accomplished at a later
period, but when St. Augustine wrote ‘if a law be unjust, it is no law at all’; we can see
foreshadowed what was to come later: the idea that if a man-made law conflicts with
natural law, it is invalid. In the eye of Christian theologists, natural law is anterior in time
and superior in hierarchy to the man-made law.
In his greatest work, De Civitate Dei (the City of God), St. Augustine portrayed the
human condition as torn between the attraction of good and evil, with the perfect state
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being one voluntary submission to the will of God. The will of God is then seen as the
highest law, eternal law, for all people, playing something of Stoic cosmic reason.
Positive law (state created law) is for St. Augustine relegated to an even less honored
place. Indeed, Augustine makes it mandatory for a positive law to rely on the eternal law.
Nothing which is just is to be found in positive law which has not been derived from
eternal law. Thus an unjust law is one which does not concord with the higher (divine)
reason and which is thus conceived, or directed, for an improper law. A positive law so
devised might, of course, be coercively enforced but could not be argued to have any
moral force. The argument, in short, relates to the moral obligation attaching to law rather
than the ability of a State actually to do wrong through its laws.
Hence, in the eye of St. Augustine, to the extent that man-made law ran counter to natural
law, it was null and void, and unjust governments were equated with criminal gangs.
Aquinas distinguishes four kinds of laws: (1) Eternal Law; (2) Divine Law; (3) Natural
Law; and (4) Human Law
A. Eternal Law: is comprised of those laws that govern the nature of an eternal
universe; as one writer observed, one can "think of eternal law as comprising all
those scientific (physical, chemical, biological, psychological, etc.) ‘laws’ by
which the universe is ordered."
B. Divine Law: is concerned with those standards that must be satisfied by a human
being to achieve eternal salvation. One cannot discover divine law by natural
reason alone; the precepts of divine law are disclosed only through divine
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revelation. For example, it is revealed to man by the Holy Scriptures that Jesus
Christ is the son of god, who was sent into the world; that, by his death on the
cross, a means of salivation should be offered to all those who confess their sins
and acknowledge Christ as their savior; further that it is God’s will that on six
days should man labor, and on the seventh, rest. No man can attain such
knowledge without revelation. One cannot know such things using his reasoning
power.
C. Natural Law: is comprised of those precepts of the eternal law that govern the
behavior of beings possessing reason and free will. On the level that we share
with all substances, the Natural Law commands that we preserve ourselves in
being. Therefore, one of the most basic precepts of the Natural Law is not to
commit suicide. On the level we share with all living things, the Natural Law
commands that we take care of our life, and transmit that life to the next
generation. Thus, almost as basic as the preservation of our lives, the Natural Law
commands us to rear and care for offspring. On the level that is most specific to
humans, the fulfillment of the Natural Law consists in the exercise of those
activities that are unique of humans, i.e. knowledge and love, and in a state that is
also natural to human persons, i.e. society. The Natural Law, thus, commands us
to develop our rational and moral capacities by growing in the virtues of intellect
(prudence, art, and science) and will (justice, courage, temperance). Natural law
also commands those things that make for the harmonious functioning of society
("Thou shalt not kill," "Thou shalt not steal.") Human nature also shows that each
of us have a destiny beyond this world, too. Man's infinite capacity to know and
love shows that he is destined to know and love an infinite being, God.
The first precept of the natural law, according to Aquinas, is the somewhat vacuous
imperative to do good and avoid evil. Here it is worth noting that Aquinas holds a
natural law theory of morality: what is good and evil, according to Aquinas, is
derived from the rational nature of human beings. Good and evil are thus both
objective and universal.
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D. Human Law: is a dictate of reason from the ruler for the community he rules.
This dictate of reason is first and foremost within the reason or intellect of the
ruler. It is the idea of what should be done to insure the well ordered functioning
of whatever community the ruler has care for. (It is a fundamental tenet of
Aquinas' political theory that rulers rule for the sake of the governed, i.e. for the
good and well-being of those subject to the ruler.)
But Aquinas is also a natural law legal theorist. In his view, a human law (i.e., that which
is promulgated by human beings) is valid only insofar as its content conforms to the
content of the natural law. As Aquinas puts the point:
[E]very human law has just so much of the nature of law as is derived from the
law of nature. But if in any point it deflects from the law of nature, it is no longer
a law but a perversion of law.
This, in effect, paraphrases the earlier Augustine's famous remark, an unjust law is really
no law at all.
The medieval power of the church dissolved with the coming of Renaissance and
political writers such Hobbes, Locke and Rousseau. These theorists all sought to base a
view of the purpose and authority of law upon a social contract, a covenant that
underlines the surrender of the powers of the individual to a state organization, the
‘Sovereign’.
In the state of nature each man possesses the natural right to do whatever he thinks fit to
preserve his life. He is bound also by the law of nature which forbids a man to do
anything which doesn’t favor the preservation of his life. By the law of nature he
discovers through his reason, man should attempt to find peace and he can only do so if
he renounces his natural right to all things. It is the equal natural rights of all men which
make life in the state of nature so insecure. This mean, in the state of nature men are
roughly equal physically (an ability to kill each other), intellectually (mainly experience),
and in right. Thus, he declared that man’s only hope to escape from the natural conditions
is to make social contract and enter in to a commonwealth (civil society). To do this they
must transfer all their natural rights, except few, to one absolute sovereign (king,
Parliament).
Hobbes argued that an unlimited governmental authority is the only alternative to harness
the wild and evil nature of mankind. For man by nature is neither social nor political,
civil society is the artificial deterrent to man’s basically antisocial tendencies. He goes on
to declare that whatever the sovereign does can not injure his subjects because it is done
with the authority of all. He cannot, therefore, be accused of injustice. Since the
sovereign is the ultimate law maker, he is above all laws and thus he cannot be said
illegal and unjust. Thus, we can see in the philosophy of Hobbes both natural law and
positivist ideas. As we shall see it later, Bentham and Austin of the positivist school of
jurisprudence have been influenced by this mode of thinking.
Of the natural rights of man, none is regarded by Locke as more important than the right
to property. Such is its preeminence that at times Locke implies that the preservation of
private property is the main reason for entering into political society. According to
Locke, originally men possessed the earth and its fruits and the beasts (animals) therein in
common. Private property is derived from the mixing of a person’s labour with land or
anything that was originally communally owned. As one’s person (labour of the body or
intellect) is indisputably one’s own, anything t with which it is blended becomes equally
one’s own property. At first, property appropriated in this way was limited to the amount
a person could use. Anything taken beyond that from the common stock belongs to
others. Moreover, the right of appropriation was limited by the necessity of leaving
“enough and as good” for others. However, Locke said, the introduction of money
transcended these limitations, and thereby enables men to accumulate property beyond
their immediate needs without spoilage.
In the state of nature men have a further right, which is to judge and punish transgressors
of the natural law. As there is no formal authority to enforce the natural law and protect
him, each man must protect his own life, liberty, and property. Each man has also a right
to enforce the law by punishing the wrong doers. This procedure entails several obvious
disadvantages; men become “judges in their own cases” and hence their reaction to
crimes against themselves, relatives or friends likely to be extreme and inconsistent. The
remedy to protect this problem is to enter into social contract and establish a government.
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Although Locke admits that the establishment of government is the remedy for the
inconveniences of the state of nature, he points out that the arbitrary government of an
absolute monarchy is more intolerable than the natural state. If government is to be set up
to improve man’s natural condition, it must be based upon the consent of the governed.
To setup a government the people as a political entity must first be established by a social
contract. Each individual contracts with others to form a political community by agreeing
to transfer, to the community as a whole, his rights to execute the law of nature. The
agreement also involves obedience to the majority will which is taken to represent the
whole community. Such a contract is the only kind which will eventually produce lawful
government.
Having established the state, men’s first task is to erect the law making body that is the
supreme power of the commonwealth. Members will be elected from among the people.
Then an organ to execute this laws will also be established. This government which is
established on trust should not betray this trust. It shall guarantee the protection of the
natural rights to life, liberty, and possessions of citizens otherwise the people will have
the right to revolt.
Value is not immanent in natural reality. Hence value cannot be deduced from
reality. It does not follow from the fact that something is, that is ought to be or to
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be done, or that is ought not to be or to be done. The fact that in reality big fish
swallow small fish does not imply that the behavior of the fish is good or bad.
There is no logical inference from the ‘is’ to the ‘ought’, from natural reality to
moral or legal value.
The content of human laws, Kelsen explains, depends on the purpose of the laws,
what the laws are designed to achieve. And what they are designed to achieve
depends on the kind of society that the law-making authority wishes to see exist. A
decision about this entails a value judgment. Value here may conflict, for example,
between personal freedom and social security. On such on issue a decision has to be
made: which of the two is to be preferred. This question cannot be answered in the
same way as the question whether iron is heavier than water, or water heavier than
wood. The question as to which of two conflicting values is to be preferred can only
be decided emotionally, according to the feeling or wishes of the whoever makes the
decision. So, what is law is what is decided to be law by the law-maker, not some
other thing, ought.
B. Good/Bad contradiction
In a second attack on natural law, Kelsen found out another flaw. Natural lawyers
justify positive law (man-made or human law) on the ground that these are needed
because of man’s badness. At the same time their doctrine requires an assumption
that man is good, because it is from human nature that the principle of natural law
are to be deducted. Thus natural lawyers entangle themselves in a contradiction.
C. Insincerity
Next Kelsen criticizes natural lawyers on the ground of their insincerity: they fail to
carry their doctrine to its logical conclusion. According to their doctrine, if positive
law conflicts with natural law, it is void. But do they, Kelsen asks, abide by the
consequences of this test? Where a law of the state conflicts with natural law do
natural lawyers in fact say that a citizen should disobey it? If the answer is in the
negative (he examines a lot of natural lawyers most of whom prefer silence), then as
Austin once said that natural law is ‘nothing but a phrase’.
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D. Absolute values and Relative values
Is value absolute or relative? This means what is right and wrong? Is it one and an
absolute one, or relative with civilizations, religions, and a different period of time?
This is as old as European philosophy. That ethical judgments and values are relative
was the tenet of Greek philosophers known as Sophists. For them there can be belief,
but not knowledge, in the sense of knowledge of absolute truth. All knowledge is
relative to the person seeking it. Sophists pointed out that customs and standards of
behavior earlier accepted as absolute and universal, and of divine institution, were, in
fact local and relative. Habits abhorrent to one society and time may be accepted as
normal elsewhere. The view of the Sophists was reflected by Democritus: ‘….we
know nothing, for truth is in the depth, and either truth does not exist or it is hidden
from us.’ The notion of ‘truth’ and ‘knowledge’ are thus illusions. What seems to
each man, is as far as he is concerned. Reality exists only in relation to our own
feelings and convictions. Kelsen summarizes, ‘there is one nature but we have
different systems of law; different beliefs of goodness and badness.’
Summary
The adherent of natural law believes that beyond, and superior to, the law made by man
are certain higher principles, the principles of natural law. These principles are immutable
and eternal. Man-made laws may vary from one community to another with respect to
matters of everyday importance ( e.g. the sides of the road on which citizens are required
to drive) but with regard to the highest matters, man-made law should be in accord with
the principles of natural law. And to the extent that man-made law conflicts with natural
law, it lacks validity: it is not a valid, binding law at all. Natural law is, as H L A Hart
once said, ‘the theory that there are certain principles of human conduct, awaiting
discovery by human reason, with which man-made law must conform if it is to be valid.’
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• is not made by human beings;
• is based on the structure of reality itself;
• is the same for all human beings and at all times;
• is an unchanging rule or pattern which is there for human beings to discover;
• is the naturally knowable moral law;
• is a means by which human beings can rationally guide themselves to their good.
By doing so, natural law theorists blended morality and law. There is no clear difference
between law and morality, law and justice etc. They claim that every human law shall
have moral background. This is because morality is one expression of natural law, and at
any time man-made law (except few) shall fit to the principle of morality and thereby to
natural law principles.
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Questions for Discussion
1. Name some of the ancient natural law philosophers.
2. Discuss the difference between Plato’s and Aristotle’s approach.
3. Do you see any contradiction in Socrates’ idea of law as presented in Apology and
Crito?
4. What is the similarity and difference between the Greek and the Stoic natural law
philosophy?
5. How many laws do we have in St. Aquinas approach? Which is relevant for this
discussion?
6. When the natural law theorist teachs that we should resort or appeal to natural law
in case of contradiction between natural law and state law, do you think it is
practical?
7. Assume you are a judge, and one day a man applies to the court for the court to
give him permission to change his sex, to change himself to a woman. That you
can’t find any law that allow or prohibit this practice in our laws it becomes your
responsibility either to allow or forbid. What would be your decision? Why? On
whatgrounds?
8. Give two examples of law (from the Penal or Civil Code) which in your opinion
fit to principle of natural law. Why?
9. Give two other provisions, from any one or both codes, which can be considered
contrary to natural law principle. Use morality and justice as a test
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UNIT THREE
THE REVIVAL OF NATURAL LAW
Introduction
During the nineteenth century natural Law was dominated and overshadowed by the
positivist school of thought. However, the massive human delinquencies by the Nazis
during the Second World War and the emergence of totalitarian States and dictators
stimulate in the 20th c the rethinking of natural law theory. Jurists raised questions
whether positive law is adequate enough to protect mankind. Besides to others, Lon L.
Fuller’s theory is the main theory in this camp. Fuller’s theory is known as ‘procedural
naturalism’ that sets out the minimum requirements for a recognizable ‘legal system’.
The basis for this analysis was the perceived weakness of law in the Third Reich and the
extent to which it could realistically have been considered to have been ‘law’ in any
meaningful sense. By doing so Fuller wanted to show a point about the nature and
function of a legal system. His system is based on the procedural aspect of law than its
substantive one. We will begin by his story in a narrative form. Beside to this we shall
also to briefly see John Finnis’ Natural Law and Natural Rights as another concept of
modern natural law theory.
Objectives
• Know the reasons for the revival of natural law theory in the 20th century
• Explain the procedural natural law of Fuller
• Show Fuller’s inner moralities of law
• Understand the theories of Finnis
• Demonstrate the difference between Finnis and other classical natural lawyers
• To discuss the features of the inner moralities of law
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3.1. Procedural Natural Law: Lon L. Fuller
The pivot or at least the common starting-point in the beginning was the attitude taken by
Gustav Radbruch (German Professor of law) to the legality of laws passed during the
Nazi era in Germany. Radbruch had originally been positivist, holding that resistance to
law was a matter for personal conscience, the validity of a law depends in no way on its
content. However, the atrocities of the Nazi regime compelled him to think again. He
noted the way in which obedience to a posited law by the legal profession had assisted
the perpetration of the horrors of the Nazi regime, and reached the conclusion that no law
could be regarded as valid if it contravened with certain basic principles of morality.
After the war it was this thinking that was followed in the trials of those responsible for
war crimes, or who had acted as informers for the former regime. In 1949 a woman was
convicted based on this principle. She denounced her husband and told authorities
because he insulted Hitler. The woman in defense claimed that her action had not been
illegal since her husband’s conduct had contravened a law prohibiting the making of
statements against the government. The court found that the Nazi statute, being ‘contrary
to the sound conscience and sense of justice of all decent human beings’, did not have a
legality that could support the woman’s defense, and she was found guilty. The case thus
illustrated a conflict between positivism and natural law, the latter triumphing. The
principle adopted in the decision was followed in many latter cases.
The morality of aspiration…is the morality of the Good Life, of excellence, of the
fullest realization of human powers…Where the morality of aspiration starts at
the top of human achievement, the morality of duty starts at the bottom. It lays
down the basic rules without which an ordered society is impossible, or without
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which an ordered society directed toward certain specific goals must fail of its
mark.
Fuller contends that the division between these two moralities is not separating polar
extremes, but a point upon a graduated scale. Thus:
….we may conveniently imagine a…scale…which begins …with the most obvious
demand of social living and extends upwards to the highest reaches of human
aspiration. Somewhere along this scale there is an invisible pointer that marks the
dividing line where the pressure of duty leaves off and the challenge of excellence
begins.
Fuller argues that, wherever the pointer might be fixed, the appropriate standard of
evaluation in the analysis of law, in terms of its claim to be ‘law’, is one of ‘duty’ rather
than ‘aspiration’. This relates partly to a view of the basic function of law. It is implicit in
Fuller’s analysis that it is not the business of law to prescribe for excellence but rather to
ensure the minimum baseline from which development towards excellence might moved.
To express the point in somewhat different terms, law cannot make people ‘good’ but
rather establish a base for the inhibition of ‘badness’ from which a good life may
develop. This is rather minimalist moral analysis of the limits of the moral questions
which may be asked about law. Beyond the establishment of the base for a viable society,
it does not seem unreasonable to suggest that law may also facilitate, or hinder, aspiration
towards higher social conditions, even accepting the validity of the distinction between
‘aspiration’ and ‘duty’. This indeed figures prominently amongst the concerns of some of
the classical naturalist theories. The analysis of moral criteria and their relationship with
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law advanced by Fuller is important in itself but also to a large extent informs the nature
of his general legal theory. Ultimately this goes to the root of the question which may be
raised upon the claim of the theory fully to fit into a naturalist context.
Professor Fuller believes that the German courts were correct in their approach. He
proposes that a system of government that lacks what he terms ‘inner morality of law’
cannot constitute a legal system, the system lacking the very characteristic – order – that
is a sine qua non of a legal system. In his book, Morality of Law, published in 1963,
Fuller explains what characteristics a system must show in order to be capable of
constituting a legal system. He begins his explanation with an allegory about ‘the
unhappy reign of a monarch who bore the convenient, but not very imaginative and not
very regal sounding name of ‘Rex.’ King Rex was determined to reform his country’s
legal system, in which procedures were cumbersome, remedies expensive, the language
of the law archaic and the judges sometimes corrupt.
His first step was to repeal all existing laws and to set about replacing these with a new
code. But, inexperienced in such matters, he found himself incapable of formulating the
general principles necessary to cover specific problems and, disheartened, gave up the
attempt.
Instead he announced that in future he would decide all disputes that arose himself. He
accordingly heard numerous cases but it became clear that no pattern was to be discerned
running through the judgments that he handed down. The confusion that ensued caused
the fiasco to be abandoned.
Seeking to learn from his mistakes, Rex undertook a course of study on making
generalizations. Having completed the course he resumed the task of providing a code
and after much labor produced a lengthy document, and announced that in the future he
would be governed by its principles in deciding cases. But, he decreed, the code was to
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remain a state secret known only to himself and his scrivener (a scribe or a registrar). The
resentment of his subjects was such that the plan had to be abandoned.
Next, Rex resolved that reform should be achieved by his deciding at the beginning of
each year all the cases that had arisen during the preceding year. This method would
enable him to act with the benefit of hindsight 1. His ruling would be accompanied by his
reasons for making them. But, since his object was to act with the benefit of hindsight, it
was to be understood that reasons given for deciding previous cases were not to be
regarded as necessarily applying to future cases.
After his subjects (the people) had explained that they needed to know in advance the
principles according to which decision would be made, Rex realized that he had no
choice but to publish a code setting out the rules by which future disputes would be
determined and after further labours a new code was published. But when the code was
finally published Rex’s subjects were dismayed to find that its obscurity was such that no
part could be understood either by laymen or lawyers.
To overcome this defect Rex ordered a team of experts to revise the code so as to leave
the substance intact but clarify the wording so that the meaning was clear to all.
However, when this was accomplished it became evident that the code was a mass of
contradictions, each provision being nullified by some other.
Undeterred by this latter failure, Rex ordered that the code should be revised to remove
the previous contradictions and that at the same time the penalties for criminal offences
should be increased, and the list of offences enlarged. This was done, and it was made,
for example, a crime punishable by ten years’ imprisonment to cough, sneeze, hiccup,
faint or fall down in the presence of the king. Failure to understand, believe in, and
correctly profess the doctrine of evolutionary, democratic redemption was made treason.
The near revolution that resulted when the code was published caused Rex to order its
withdrawal. Once again a revision was undertaken. The new code was a masterpiece of
1
Understanding the nature of an event after it has happened
38
draftsmanship. It was consistent, clear, required nothing that could not reasonably be
complied with, and distributed freely. However, by the time that the new code came into
operation its provisions had been overtaken by events (became obsolete or lagging behind
time). To bring this code into line with current needs, amendments had to be issued daily.
With time the number of amendments began to diminish and public discontent to ease.
But before this had happened Rex announced that he was resuming the sole judicial role
in the country: all cases would be tried by himself. At first all went well. His decisions
indicated the principles that had guided him, and those by which future issues would be
determined. At least a coherent body of law seemed to be appearing. But with time, as the
volumes of Rex’s judgments were published, it became clear that there was no link
between Rex’s decisions and the provisions of the code.
Leading citizens met to discuss what should be done but before any decision was reached
Rex died ‘old before his time and deeply disillusioned with his subjects’.
These qualities make up the ‘inner morality of law’. The word ‘morality’ is misleading.
The word carries ethical connotations, yet none are intended. What Fuller refers to is the
inner character of a legal system, the characteristics without which a system cannot
39
properly be regarded as a legal system. The phrase also used by Fuller as ‘fidelity to law’,
reflects the notion that a citizen can owe a duty to obey only where the features that make
up the inner morality of law are present.
Does Fuller’s view that a system of government that lacks the ‘inner morality of law’ can
command no allegiance from a citizen mean that Fuller is to be regarded as a natural
lawyer? In one sense Fuller stands outside the natural law camp. Imagine a law that
required all children of ten who were left-handed to be executed. To a natural lawyer the
law would, being in conflict with a code higher than man-made decrees, be void. Yet the
law would not conflict with any of the Fuller requirements: the law would display the
inner morality of law. So for Fuller the law would, we must presume, be valid. In this
sense Fuller stands as a positivist. And yet the flavor of natural law hangs about him.
Consider this passage from his book:
To me there is nothing shocking in saying that a dictatorship which clothes itself with a
tinsel of legal form can so far depart from the morality of order, from the inner morality
of law itself, that it ceases to be a legal system. When a system calling itself law is
predicted upon a general disregard by judges of the terms of the laws they
purport to enforce, when this system habitually cures its legal irregularities, even
the grossest, by retroactive statutes, when it has only to resort to forays of terror
in the streets, which no one dares challenge, in order to escape even those scant
restraints imposed by the pretence of legality – when all these things have become
true of dictatorship, it is not hard for me, at least, to deny to it the name of law.
Here and elsewhere in his writing we gain the impression that it is not so much the failure
to observe the inner morality of law that sticks in Fuller’s throat as the evil that in
practice results from this failure. Be that as it may, what we can say is this: under
mainstream natural law thinking a law is not a valid law if it conflicts with a higher moral
code. For Fuller a law is not valid if it forms part of a purported legal system that fails to
comply with a higher code, the code in Fuller’s case, however, being one based not on
ethical values, but on values stemming from rationality. In this sense, in that he judges a
law’s validity by reference to an outside standard, Fuller’s thinking can fairly be regarded
as forming a strand in the natural law tradition.
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3.1.5 Criticisms on Fuller
Hart’s well-known criticism of Fuller’s equally well known eight principles of the ‘inner
morality’ of law is one we choose as a criticism on this point. These principles, which
loosely describe requirements of procedural justice, were claimed by Fuller to ensure that
a legal system would satisfy the demands of morality, to the extent that a legal system
which adhered to all of the principles would explain the all important idea of ‘fidelity to
law’. In other words, such a legal system would command obedience with moral
justification.
Fuller’s key idea is that evil aims lack ‘logic’ and ‘coherence’ that moral aims have. Thus
paying attention to the ‘coherence’ of the laws ensures their morality. The argument is
unfortunate because it does, of course, claim too much. Hart’s criticism is that we could,
equally, have eight principles of the ‘inner morality’ of the poisoner’s art (‘use tasteless,
odourless poison’; ‘use poisons that are fully eliminated from the victim’s body’; etc). Or
we can improve further. We can talk of principles of the inner morality of Nazism, for
example, or the principles of the inner morality of chess. The point is that the idea of
principles in themselves with the attendant explanation at a general level of what is to be
achieved (elimination of non-Aryan races) and consistency is insufficient to establish the
moral nature of such practices.
Kramer provides another version of Hart’s criticism of Fuller. He concludes that, in the
end, the idea that Fuller’s theory captures a moral ‘reciprocity’ between rulers and the
ruled ultimately fails. The forces of this idea of reciprocity is that however much we can
imagine ‘evil’ legal systems of a highly efficient kind appear to comply with the ‘inner
morality’ of law, evil legal systems built on such lines can still exist.
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3.2 Substantive Natural Law: John Finnis
3.2.1 Introduction
Unlike Fuller’s concept of procedural natural law the theory of ‘natural rights’ advanced
by John Finnis falls unequivocally into the category of naturalist theory. Finnis has
almost single-handedly tried to resurrect the natural law tradition in moral philosophy and
law since the mid 1960s. Since the 1980s he has had several more companions, some of
whom teach in elite schools in the USA. He tries to offer a "neo-Aquinian" natural law
philosophy which does not presuppose a divine being. Instead of speaking, as would
Plato, about the Form of the Good, or seeking the Good, he will speak about human
desires to pursue "basic goods" in life. By focusing attention on goods rather than a
single Good, Finnis skillfully articulates what he calls a theory of moral action for our
day. Or, in other words, he seeks a theory of how to live well.
a. Finnis denies that natural law derives from the objectively determinable patterns
of behaviour, but instead asserts it is ascertainable from inward knowledge of
innate motivations.
b. Natural law does not entail the view that law is not law if it contradicts morality.
In his book, Natural Law and Natural Rights, Finnis seeks to distance his own position
and that of his philosophical predecessors from these much-vaunted criticisms. Natural
law may be the set of principles of practical reasonableness in ordering human life and
human community, but he asserts that they are pre-moral. By this he means that they are
not the product of logical deduction, nor are they merely passions verified with reference
to something objectively regarded as good. The latter position represents the view of the
42
empiricists such as Hume, and is that all moral values are subjective whims that have the
extra force of validity because others accept them as being good.
To the extent that the empiricists’ and also positivists’ (see next chapter) criticism of
some natural lawyers might be right, he states that there is no inference from fact to
value. Therefore the goods that Finnis speaks of are not moral goods, but they are
necessary objects of human striving. The peculiar nature of this view is that theses goods
are subjective so far as they require no justification from the outside world, but are really
objective since all human must assent to their value. Finnis argues that these are the result
of innate (inborn) knowledge.
As stated above, there is a strong affinity between Finnis’ view of natural law and that of
Aquinas. However, the major difference is that, for Finnis, the existence of God is only
possible explanation for the comparative order of that he seeks to project on human
values, not the necessary reason. Finnis instead states that his goods are self-evident. This
is demonstrated by, though not inferred from, the consistency of values that are identified
throughout all human societies, such as a respect for human life.
Finnis’ process of reasoning is to address any individual with the question, ‘X is good,
don’t you think?’ He maintains that it is because of the consistency of these basic values
of human nature that one gets one’s ability sympathetically, though not uncritically, to
see the point of actions, life-styles, characters and cultures that one would not choose for
oneself. This argument about consistency of human nature is a compelling one. Often we
refer to the writings of Shakespeare whose observations about humanity are as relevant
today as they were when he was writing. Finnis can certainly say with justification, that,
as a speculative truth, human nature seems remarkably constant.
The theory may be briefly stated as follows: all rational agents set out to preserve or
obtain things they perceive to be good for themselves. Even the most rational actors,
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however, can be mistaken. We need to exercise practical reason (he takes this term from
Aristotle) to obtain that good at any one time. Based on the consistent behaviour of
human kind he isolates what he calls seven "basic goods" in life, goods that are
fundamental, underived from other goods and irreducible to other things that are the
motivation and goal of action.
a. Life, meaning not merly existence but also the capacity for development of
potential. Within the category of life and its preservation Finnis includes
procreation.
b. Knowledge, not only as a means to an end but as a good in its own right which
improves life quality.
c. Play, in essence the capacity for recreational experience and enjoyment.
d. Aesthetic experience, in some ways relate to play but not necessarily so, this is
broadly a capacity to experience and relate to some perception of beauty.
e. Sociability or friendship, occurring at various levels but commonly accepted as a
‘good’ aspect of social life. One might add that this ‘good’ would seem to be an
essential aspect of human conducts as social creatures, as put by Aristotle.
f. Practical reasonableness, essentially the capacity to shape one’s conduct and
attitude according to some ‘intelligent and reasonable’ thought process.
g. Religion, this is not limited to, although it clearly includes, religion in the formal
sense of faith and practice centered upon some sense of the divine. The reference
here is to a sense of the responsibility of human beings to some greater order than
that of their own individuality.
2.3.4 Evaluation
It may be seen that Finnis’ list is not radically different from the list of other
philosophers. The difference Finnis asserts is that these goods are not the result of
speculative reason. They are not goods because of anything, they are just good. The
problem is that they are, according to Finnis, ‘primary, indemonstrable and self-evident.’
44
The student may be tempted to view life as a necessary material pre-condition to all of
the others. One cannot play football or study law if s/he is a corpse. However, Finnis,
with his emphasis on life as being a good rather than an empirical necessity, forestalls
this criticism. The value of life is nothing without the other goods in some measure.
Simply, the student must ask him/her self: ‘Do I believe that any of these seven goods is
intrinsically good?’
Many jurists simply agree or prefer silence in Finnis approach. Micheal Doherty
comments about Finnis’ methodology as follows:
By employing the principle that goods are self-evident, rather than derived from
objectively observable facts, Finnis not only avoids being accused of deriving an
‘ought’ from ‘is’, but also deprives us of any attack on his methodology. Since we
cannot show precisely where values came from, we are reduced to attacking the
paucity of analogous arguments.
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UNIT FOUR
POSITIVISM
Introduction
Positivism, also known as analytical jurisprudence is another school of jurisprudence
whose advocates believe in basically two concepts: first they consider law as a social fact
rather than a set of rules derived from natural law. Thus law is essentially posited, that is
created by human beings…be it the individual sovereign or the state as an organized
group of human persons. This works for Hart, Austin, Raz or Coleman. The second point
is that they sharply separate law and morality, and that legal rules do not derive their
legitimacy from universal moral principles. A related issue is the separation thesis of “is”
and “ought” argument. It says that unlike natural law concept which is based on the belief
that all written laws must follow universal principles of morality, religion, and justice, a
theory of law should focus on defining the concept of law as it is rather than discussing
what it ought to be/ moral standards that it needs to meet to be considered as valid. The
task of jurisprudents for positivists therefore is analytical, i.e. defining and analyzing the
concepts of law and legal system, identifying its essential features and outlining its
meaning from a social, logical and even semantic/linguistic perspective.
Positivism serves two values. First, by requiring that all law be written or somehow
communicated to society, it ensures that the government will explicitly apprise the
members of society of their rights and obligations. In a legal system run in strict
accordance with positivist tenets, litigants would never be unfairly surprised or burdened
by the government imposition of an unwritten legal obligation that was previously
unknown and nonexistent. This argument was basically propagated by Jeremy Betham
during his attack of the common law.
46
Second, positivism reduces the power of the judge to the application of laws, it does not
allow judges to make laws. In some cases judges are not satisfied with the outcome of a
case that would be dictated by a narrow reading of existing laws. For example, some
judges may not want to allow a landlord to evict an elderly and sick woman in the middle
of muddy Kiremt, even if the law requires such action when rent is overdue. However,
positivism requires judges to decide cases in accordance with the law. Positivists believe
that the integrity of the law is maintained through a neutral and objective judiciary that is
not guided by subjective notions of equity.
The above introduction is, of course, a general approach to the ideas of the positivist
school of jurisprudence. But in this part we shall not investigate all jurisprudents from
this school of thought. Only the most prominent will be discussed here. Hence, John
Austin (together with Hume & Bentham), H L A Hart, and Hans Kelsen will be the main
subjects of our discussion.
Objectives
After reading this chapter students will be able to:
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The Command Theory: John Austin’s Positivism
Introduction
The word positivism is related to the English word ‘posit’ which means put something
firmly, or imposing something on somebody. The idea is that since positivists believe that
law is made by an authority and imposed on the people for obedience, the name
positivism stems from this root word. Positivism is also known in two other names:
Imperative, and Analytical Jurisprudence. The main proponent of this school is John
Austin who boldly tried to define law on the bases of state authority. He was influenced
by Hobbes and Bentham. In here we shall see David Hume, Jermy Bentham, and John
Austin himself.
Objectives
The exact nature of the influence of David Hume on European philosophy has always
been controversial, but there is a hard core which is undisputed. Our concern here is
limited to the themes which are relevant to legal theory, in particular the rise of
positivism and the eclipse of natural law. Hume’s fundamental purpose in his
philosophical writing was twofold: to challenge the traditional framework of moral
philosophy in such a way that morality and law would be humanized by becoming more
relative to human interests; and to undermine the overblown pretensions to knowledge of
2
English Philosopher on Human Nature1711-1776
48
the rationalist philosophers of the Enlightenment. In carrying out this purpose, Hume
inadvertently did much to establish the conceptual framework within which the
transformation of every discipline into a rigorous science would be undertaken.
Hume stipulated two conditions for speaking good sense on any subject.
The first - which is known as ‘Hume’s Fork’ - is that all investigation should be confined
to the reporting of experimental observation on the one hand (‘matters of fact’) and the
rational elucidation of ‘relations between ideas’ (logical connections) on the other. The
second condition is that such matters of fact should be understood in complete
independence from any subjective evaluation of the factual subject matter (the much
quoted ‘separation of fact and value’ or ‘is’ and ‘ought’). Reasoning which moves from
matters of fact to matters of value results in confusion and nonsense. This is the
philosophical source of the separation thesis in jurisprudence for it gives the positivists
the tool to attack natural law principle (ought principle) which usually blends facts and
values.
To these two claims, Hume added a third essential point concerning the nature of this
reasoning. Contrary to the suppositions of his predecessors, Hume argued that the faculty
of human reason is perfectly inert and morally neutral: ‘It is not contrary to reason to
prefer the destruction of the entire world to the scratching of one’s little finger.’ The idea
here is that reason has no bearing on human interests one way or the other. When this
idea is applied to the first two conditions, the Humean implications for the human
sciences become clear. If reason is morally neutral, the rational investigation of any kind
of human behavior or institution will make no reference beyond what is either
empirically observable or logically demonstrable. The two cannot be combined. Second,
the investigation will have nothing to reveal about the moral content of its subject matter.
The moral worthiness of any human activity is simply not open to rational analysis.
Hume is saying reason is merely an instrument. It is about achieving something through
the most efficient means…but cannot be used to evaluate the end itself. Approval or
condemnation may be felt by a subjective moral sense, but this is no more than the
49
projection of an inner feeling on to an external object. The implications of Hume’s
austere proposals, when drawn out, would transform the very idea of law.
Do you see any similarity between Hume’s idea and Kelsen’s criticism against natural
law?
In effect, it was Hume who first opened the eyes of positivists who challenged the close
relationship of law and morality; that law has nothing to do with morality or religion.
Law should be investigated beyond any bias of morality.
The beginning of the decline of natural law theory can be dated quite precisely from the
time of Bentham’s scathing attack on Blackstone’s (1723-80) Commentaries on the Laws
of England. With hindsight, this can be seen as the historical turning point, the successful
launching of modern legal positivism.
Bentham had many specific complaints about common law theory and its practice. He
regarded much of what happened in the English courts as ‘dog- law’: that is, as the
practice of waiting for one’s dog to do something wrong, and then beating it. His low
opinion of the doctrine and practice of judicial precedent was illustrated by his likening
of the doctrine to a magic vessel from which red or white wine could be poured,
according to taste. This ‘double fountain effect’, whereby the decisions of judges are seen
as capricious selection of whichever precedent suits their prejudice, was regarded by
Bentham as the inevitable outcome of a legal system which is not controlled by universal
rational legislation.
Bentham’s overriding passion for legal reform required the kind of clarification which
would mercilessly expose the shortcomings, the corruption and obfuscation which he
found in the common law as it existed at the turn of the nineteenth century. This clarity,
3
English Utilitarian philosopher and Jurist, 1748-1832
50
Bentham believed, could only be achieved with a rigorous separation of law and
morality. As we have seen, the exact meaning of this ‘separation thesis’ has become
deeply controversial. What Bentham himself meant by it was reasonably clear. If the law
was to be subjected to systematic criticism in the cause of reform, it was essential that its
workings should first be described in accurate detail. This was a matter of dispassionate
factual reporting of the nature and workings of law, which he termed ‘expository’
jurisprudence. What he found obstructing this project of clarification was the blurring of
the boundary between legal reality and value judgment.
This was precisely what Bentham accused traditional legal writers of doing. Blackstone,
as one of the most eminent of these writers, was singled out by Bentham as a prime
example of one who clothed moral preaching in the language of law. When law is
analyzed in such a way that each law is represented as the embodiment of a Christian
moral principle, the result is the kind of vagueness and indeterminacy which is inherently
resistant to radical reform on the basis of the utility of the laws. When, by contrast, law is
analyzed according to Bentham’s expository principles, the way is prepared for a clear-
headed ‘censorial’ jurisprudence, subjecting the law to moral criticism, based on the
principles of utility.
Remember that Bentham is the leading authority in the utilitarian school of thought that
teaches the greater happiness for the greater part of the society. Utility, hence, requires
that law-making and legal institutions be designed to promote the greatest happiness of
the greatest number of people. Utility would replace traditional, self-serving or
subjectively moral evaluation with a rational evaluation of the worth of particular
practices, institutions and policies. These would be judged in terms of how far they
served the common good, measured in terms of maximization of satisfaction of the actual
desires of the greatest possible number of the population.
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4.3 John Austin on Positivism and Separation thesis
John Austin was another English jurisprudent who for the first time boldly criticized
natural law and gave direct and clear definition of law. Before giving his definition of
law, Austin identified what kind of law it is he is seeking to define. In this part of his
theory we shall see what he called positive law and positive morality and his command
theory. His idea was given in a series of lectures.
4
Emphasis is added by the writer.
52
The lectures then embark on a rather tedious classification of law, some of which,
however, is of the greatest importance in understanding key points of Austin’s legal
theory. Austin distinguishes laws ‘properly so called’ from phenomena improperly
labeled as law. There are two classes of laws properly so called: divine law (set by God
for human kind) and human laws (others called them man-made) which are set by human
beings for other human beings. The most significant category of human laws comprises
what Austin calls Positive law. These are laws set by superior acting as such or by people
acting in pursuance of legal rights conferred on them by political superiors (that is acting
as delegates of political superiors in making laws). The term ‘positive’ refers to the idea
of law placed or laid down in some specific way and, as such, could apply to divine law,
which Austin conceives as God’s command. But he wants to reserve the term positive
law for human laws laid down by, or on the authority of, political superiors – the true
subject of legal science. So the word ‘positive’ indicates a positing or setting of rules by
human creators.
The other category of human law consists of rules laid down by persons having power
over others but not as political superiors or in pursuance of legal right. This seems to
cover many rules which lawyers would not usually regard as law, although Austin has no
doubt that the term ‘law’ can be used here ‘with absolute precision or propriety’. Since he
uses the word ‘power’ in a general sense, it seems to include the capacity of any authority
figures – for example, priests or religious leaders, employers, teachers, parents, guardians
or political orators – to control or influence the actions of followers, dependants or those
in their charge. Austin clearly regards rule-making in such cases as significant in shaping
the attitudes, opinions or moral sentiments of individuals or groups. Indeed, it forms part
of what he calls positive morality. As morality it is distinguished from positive law; and it
is positive because it is laid down by human beings for human beings. Positive morality
also contains another category of rules: those without particular creators but set by the
opinion or sentiment of an indeterminate body of people – that is, by public opinion or
community opinion. Austin calls these authorless rules laws ‘by analogical extension’;
they are not laws ‘properly so called’ even though we sometimes talk of laws of fashion,
etiquette or honor.
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Finally, for completeness, he mentions one other category of laws ‘improperly so called.’
Scientific laws are not laws in the jurisprudential sense. They are the regularities of nature
which science discovers but which are not laid down as laws. Austin calls them
‘metaphorical laws.’
Look at the following attachment and understand more the classification of laws by
Austin.
If you look back once again into the discussion made so far, you can see the definition of
law given by Austin, law is a command of the sovereign enforced by sanction. But
remember again this is positive law. From this definition we can identify three essential
elements: sovereign, command, and sanction.
A. Sovereignty 5
To amplify his definition of law Austin goes on to examine the nature of sovereignty.
Sovereignty exists, Austin says, where the bulk of a given political society are in the
5
For more clarification of the word one can read Hobbes’ book Leviathan.
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habit of obedience to a determinate common superior6, and that common superior is not
habitually obedient to a determinate superior. He amplifies certain aspect of this concept.
6
According to Hobbeasian philosophy, the sovereign is subject to no one. It is supreme beyond any law.
The same idea is advocated by Austin.
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v. Sovereign obeys no one else: the common determinate superior to whom the bulk of
the society renders obedience must not himself be habitually obedient to a
determinate human superior. For example, a regional prince may be superior to the
people he governs. But he is yet not really superior within his province, nor are he
and his society an independent society. Thus, in the strictest sense of Austin’s
sovereignty the prince is not a sovereign for he obeys another human superior, e.g.
the king.
vi. Supreme in power: the power of the sovereign is incapable of legal limitation.
Austin says: ‘Supreme power limited by positive law is a flat contradiction in
terms.’ One may ask what about his position in relation to the constitution? May a
body be sovereign yet subject to the constitutional law? Austin answers, no. A
sovereign is subject to no legal limitation. He explains that whenever there is a conflict
between the principles of the constitution and the act of the sovereign, the latter must
thwart the former.
From the above explanation you can easily conclude that in Austin’s theory of law the
sovereign is an absolute supreme, one similar to the Hobbessian sovereign. This is
because it is the sovereign who creates and gives laws to his subjects. He is above and
beyond any laws and fellow men. He is the ultimate author of laws, executor and decision
maker.
B. Command
Like Hobbes, Austin defines a law as a kind of command. Power is again made central to
law. Austin states: ‘a command is distinguished from other significations of desire, not by
the style in which the desire is signified, but by the power and purpose of the party
commanding to inflict an evil or pain in case the desire be disregarded’. Thus, the power
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to inflict punishment (sanction) in case of non-compliance is what makes an expression a
command. Remember again that moral commands are not laws or commands in the
Austinian sense of the word.
This is one aspect of his legal theory, which indicates that his view of law is very
different from that of many liberal theories. The latter tend to see law as a set of rules
whose purpose should be to mark out a general sphere of liberty of the individual
guaranteed against the risk of arbitrary state power. Austin, by contrast, sees law as a
technical instrument of government or administration, which should, however, be
efficient and aimed at the common good as determined by utility.
C. Sanction
Austin’s view of law is also reflected clearly in the emphasis he attaches to punitive
sanctions in the structure of a law. Since sanctions are essential for the existence of
commands, they are, for Austin, essential to the existence of laws. There must be, he said,
‘a power to inflict an evil to the party’ in case of non compliance. There is here an
important difference from Bentham’s legal theory, which also treats sanctions as essential
to laws. Bentham (and other writers) saw no reason why legal sanction could not include
rewards as well as penalties. Austin, after considering this, rejects it. A reward held out
for compliance would indicate a promise or inducement but not a command, on the basis
of ordinary usage of the word which specifies non-optional conduct.
Laws, by their nature, provide for sanctions, he said. Sanctions are analytically essential
to laws, whether or not they are sociologically necessary. Thus, any disadvantage
formally specified directly or indirectly by a law as to be imposed in case of non-
compliance can serve as that law’s sanction. Mere inconvenience or the fact that a
transaction or document is rendered null and void by law would count as sufficient
sanction. A sanction can also be a further legal obligation. Thus, breach of one law (say, a
traffic offence) might lead to a further obligation (to appear in court to answer charges).
A chain of legal obligation is possible. At the end of the chain, however, there must be a
sanction. ‘Imperative laws’, lacking sanctions completely, are not laws in the Austinian
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sense. Neither are declaratory nor repealing ‘laws’, since they command nothing. For
example, most of the rules in the civil code are without sanction and hence, according to
Austin, they are no laws. Now as we shall see in the next parts, this is one of the reasons
for his criticism.
Austin is the first serious thinker in the positivism school of jurisprudence. Actually, as
we have seen before, he was strongly influenced by Hume and Bentham. Now, in this
section we shall see his version of positivism and his stand on natural law theory.
Since ancient Greece all the way up to early Christian times, it had been widely
considered that a relationship existed between the validity of a law and its moral content.
For example, as we have discussed before, in the middle ages the view took a form of a
belief that if a man-made law conflicted with the law of God 7 then the law was not a
valid law. The doctrine that a man-made law is valid only if it does not conflict with a
higher law – religious or secular- constitutes a key element of the natural law theory.
This notion is totally rejected by Austin. For Austin, a law is valid law if it is set by a
sovereign. It is valid if it exists, regardless of its moral content. If it is commanded by the
sovereign, if the law is decreed, placed in position, posited, then it is valid law. Thus,
what he called as ‘positive law’ is a law whatever its source or contents. A positivist is,
hence, one who regards a law as being valid not by reference to some higher law or moral
code, but by reason of no more than its existence. Austin clearly declares:
7
Look, for example, our discussion on the Christianity, ideas of St. Augustine and St. Thomas Aquinas.
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The existence of law is one thing, its merit or demerit is another. Whether it be or
be not [i.e. whether law exists or does not exist] is one enquiry; whether it be or
be not conformable to an assumed standard is a different enquiry.
Austin has no problem with making the enquiries. But it should not go beyond that;
simple comparison. This means, when we say that human law is good or bad, or is what it
ought to be or what it ought not to be, we mean that the law agrees with or differs from
something (E.g. Morality) to which we tacitly refer it to measure or test. He makes a clear
separation between the question and what the law ought to be (it is possible one can make
reference to higher laws) and the determination of what the law is. ‘Is’ and ‘Ought’ must
be kept separate. For Austin, the fact that the law, according to some higher principle, is
not what it ought to be is no reason for saying that it is not. In other words, ought can be
identified (to simplify) with criteria for distinguishing between good and bad law. A law
might be bad, but it is still law and must be obeyed by the subjects so long as it is made
by the sovereign.
Just to make it clearer, take, for example, the issue of abortion or homosexuality. Both
are contrary to morality and God’s laws since in most religious scriptures (at least the
Bible and the Koran) these acts are sins. When you think of an ‘Ought’, you must think
as a natural law theorist. If you are to obey the law it ought to be in conformity with the
higher laws, such as morality or divine laws (the Bible or the Koran.) As a positivist,
however, what comes to your mind first is whether the law is (means actually exists).
You will not consider whether it should have been conforming to a higher law or not.
Thus, if a government legalizes abortion or homosexuality, the natural law believer will
not recognize it, as the new law doesn’t conform to his ideals (for him what the law ought
to be was prohibiting these acts). But for a positivist, the problem is simple. If the
sovereign says so, then let it be.
Reminder
Individual project
Please read ‘the dilemma of the child’ in the beginning of the previous
chapter, on natural law theory, and consider the position of the child and his
father. This is the dilemma of today’s world, too
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Therefore, for a positivist, the subject matter of jurisprudence is positive law. The
scientific investigation and analysis of law must revolve around or concentrate on the
positive law, law created by sovereign power.
HLA Hart is himself another positivist who approaches the concept of law from different
vantage point. He made a critical criticism on Austin’s concept of law and his criticisms
fall under three main heads.
A. Laws as we know them are not like orders backed by threats
There are three reasons why this so.
i. The content of law is not like a series of orders backed by a threat. Some laws,
Hart concedes, do resemble orders backed by threats, for example criminal laws.
But there are many types of laws that do not resemble orders backed by threats,
For example, laws that prescribe the way in which valid contracts, wills or
marriages are made do not compel people to behave in a certain way (as do laws
that, for example, require the wearing of seat belt in a car). The function of such
laws is different. They provide individuals with facilities for realizing their wishes
by conferring legal powers upon them to create, by certain specified procedures
and subject to certain conditions, structures of rights and duties…’ Thus, such
laws are laws which simply provide rights. E.g. Every man has the right to marry
or not to marry. In the eye of Austin this is not law. But that is his default.
Again, laws of public nature, in the field of constitutional and administrative law,
and in the field of procedure, jurisdiction and judicial process, are not comparable
with orders backed by threats. Such laws are better regarded as power-conferring
rules.
ii. The range of application of law is not the same as the range of application of an
order backed by a threat. In Austin’s scheme the law-maker (sovereign) is not
bound by the command he gives: the order is directed to others, not to himself. It
is true, Hart concedes, that in some systems of government this is what may
occur. But in many systems of law legislation has a force that is binding on the
body that makes it. So, as a law-maker can be bound by his own law, the
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Austinian concept of sovereign – command – obedience – sanction can not be of
universal application and so fails. In modern democracies, for example, the power
of the law maker (parliament) is limited by the constitution which precedes it and
defines its power. If the lawmaker violates these limits, the law might be
nullified.
iii. The mode of origin of law is different from the mode of origin of an order backed
by a threat. This means, Austin assumes the sovereign as the only source of law.
But in reality, laws can be created by other bodies outside the law maker. For
example, most customary laws that are usually enforced by courts (in common
law) can be good examples. Laws can also be created by an administrative body.
What Hart in short means is that law should not be based on one particular body. It
rather must be a system that gives uninterrupted continuity. What is in fact found in
any legal system is the existence of rules which secure the uninterrupted transition of
power from one law-maker to the next. These rules regulate the succession in
advance, naming or specifying in general terms the qualifications of and mode of
determining the law giver. In short, Austinian laws lack institutional strength. Look
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for example at the Ethiopian civil code, which even after 40 years still continues to be
obeyed. Change of the sovereign doesn’t change its applicability.
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Austin’s Analysis of Laws
(Significance of desire)
COMMANDS (Requests/admonitions)
LAWS (Orders)
Laws by Laws by
Analogy metaphor
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4.4 Pure Theory of Law: Hans Kelsen
Introduction
Kelsen is most famous for his studies on law and especially for his idea known as the
pure theory of the law. It is said his theory of law is the most complex one. He declares
that law must be studied as a pure science independent of other incidents, like morality
and justice, which makes him part of the positive school of jurisprudence. In this part we
will look at two main things. First his criticism on natural law theory, and second, his
‘Pure theory of law’.
Objective
After reading this part it is hoped students will have the notion of:
• The idea of Grundnorm
• Similarity and difference between Hart and Kelsen
As we tried to see above, Kelsen found out that natural law has flaws and it contaminates
law with other standards, which makes it imposible for scientific study of the subject
matter. Hence, instead, Kelsen suggested a ‘pure’ theory of law which would avoid
contamination of any kind. Jurisprudence, Kelsen propounded, “characterizes itself as a
‘pure’ theory of law because it aims at cognition focused on the law alone” and this
purity serves as its “basic methodological principle.”
The law, according to Kelsen, is a system of norms. Norms are ‘ought’ statements,
prescribing certain modes of conduct. Unlike moral norms, however, Kelsen maintained
that legal norms are created by acts of will. They are products of deliberate human action.
For instance, some people gather in a hall, speak, raise their hands, count them, and
promulgate a string of words. These are actions and events taking place at a specific time
and space. To say that what we have described here is the enactment of a law, is to
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interpret these actions and events by ascribing a normative significance to them. Kelsen,
however, firmly believed in Hume's distinction between ‘is’ and ‘ought’, and in the
impossibility of deriving ‘ought’ conclusions from factual premises alone. Thus Kelsen
believed that the law, which is comprised of norms or ‘ought’ statements, cannot be
reduced to those natural actions and events which give rise to it. The gathering, speaking
and raising of hands, in itself, is not the law; legal norms are essentially ‘ought’
statements, and as such, cannot be deduced from factual premises alone.
How is it possible, then, to ascribe an ‘ought’ to those actions and events which purport
to create legal norms? Kelsen's reply is enchantingly simple: we ascribe a legal ought to
such norm-creating acts by, ultimately, presupposing it. Since ‘ought’ cannot be derived
from ‘is’, and since legal norms are essentially ‘ought’ statements, there must be some
kind of an ‘ought’ presupposition at the background, rendering the normativity of law
intelligible.
As opposed to moral norms which, according to Kelsen, are typically deduced from other
moral norms by syllogism (e.g., from general principles to more particular ones), legal
norms are always created by acts of will. Such an act can only create law, however, if it is
in accord with another ‘higher’ legal norm that authorizes its creation in that way. And
the ‘higher’ legal norm, in turn, is valid only if it has been created in accordance with yet
another, even ‘higher’ legal norm that authorizes its enactment. Ultimately, Kelsen
argued, one must reach a point where the authorizing norm is no longer the product of an
act of will, but is simply presupposed, and this is, what Kelsen called, the Basic Norm or
Grundnorm. More concretely, Kelsen maintained that in tracing back such a ‘chain of
validity’ (to use Raz's terminology), one would reach a point where a ‘first’ historical
constitution is the basic authorizing norm of the rest of the legal system, and the Basic
Norm is the presupposition of the validity of that first constitution. It is like constructing
a pyramid, starting from wider bases to reach the pick, the apex, i.e. the Grundnorm.
Kelsen wants to identify a basic legal principle which will ultimately include or define
the legal structures of all cultures. The Grundnorm or Basic Norm is a statement against
which all other duty statements can, ultimately, be validated. The Basic Norm is
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ultimately a sort of act of faith--it is the belief in a principle beyond which one cannot go
and which ends up being the foundational principle for all subsequent legal statements.
You cannot "go beyond" the Grundnorm because it is an improvable first step. Ultimately
it appears that the Grundnorm for Kelsen is a belief that one's respective legal system
ought to be complied with. Lots of other principles can then flow from this basic
realization.
The basic norm, then, is the most general norm which is hypothesized as the norm behind
the final authority to which all particular valid norms can be traced back. This is the only
norm which cannot itself be questioned or validated. It is in this sense that its validity is
presupposed or tacitly assumed in any legal activity - for example, the relevant actions of
a court official, a police officer, a solicitor, a gaoler - which acknowledges the validity of
particular norms. It should be noticed especially that the basic norm is not the actual
constitution - of the USA, UK, Germany or wherever - which would be the empirical
object of political science.
Kelsen attributed two main explanatory functions to the Basic Norm: it explains both the
unity of a legal system and the reasons for the legal validity of norms. Apparently,
Kelsen believed that these two ideas are very closely related, since he seems to have
maintained that the legal validity of a norm and its membership in a given legal system
are basically the same thing. Furthermore, Kelsen argued that every two norms which
derive their validity from a single Basic Norm necessarily belong to the same legal
system and, vice versa, so that all legal norms of a given legal system derive their validity
from one Basic Norm. It is widely acknowledged that Kelsen erred in these assumptions
about the unity of legal systems. Generally speaking, in spite of the considerable interest
in Kelsen's theory of legal systems and their unity that derives from a single Basic Norm,
critics have shown that this aspect of Kelsen's theory is refutable. Although it is certainly
true that the law always comes in systems, the unity of the system and its separation from
other systems is almost never as neat as Kelsen assumed.
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GN
Kelsen’s Grundnorm as the top of the Pyramid
There are, of course, clear parallels between Hart’s rule of recognition as the source of
legal validity and Kelsen’s basic norm. They both serve the same vital function in
grounding the positivist interpretation of the idea of a legal system. The rule of
recognition, like the basic norm, is the linchpin which gives the system unity, and every
other rule must be referred to it. The differences, however, are as great as the similarities.
Hart’s basic rule is a (secondary) rule of law, not a Kelsen-style norm, or ‘ought-
statement’. As such, it is a social fact, rather than a hypothetical norm which is
presupposed by all legal activity. As a social fact and a rule of law, it is itself a part of the
legal system, whereas the Kelsenian basic norm lies outside of the system. There is also a
different reason for its validity being unchallengeable. For Hart, it is a meaningless
question to ask whether or not the rule of recognition is valid. The demand for a
demonstration of its validity, he says, is equivalent to demanding that the standard metre
bar in Paris is correct.
Legal validity is measured against this basic rule of law; it cannot be measured against
itself.
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Questions for Discussion
1) What are the main criticisms made by Kelsen against the natural lawyers?
2) What kind of approach does Kelson prefer to study the law?
3) What is Grundnorm or Basic norm?
4) Mention some differences and similarities between Hart and Kelsen’s source of
legal validity.
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4.5 H L A Hart- The Concept of Law
Introduction
Hart (1907-1992) was a Barrister, a professor and well known legal philosopher in
England and in the world. The Concept of Law by H L A Hart was published in 1961.
Hart is said to be the leading philosopher in the positivist camp who extensively wrote
about the nature of law. His approach is grouped as soft positivism in which he rejects
Austin's command theory but holds on to the separabilty of law and moral thesis. In this
part we will look at Hart’s view of the law. His criticism on Austin was presented in the
previous chapter
Objectives
After finalizing the reading of this part students are expected to:
• analyze Hart’s concept of law
• understand the concept of primary and secondary laws
A statement about a rule made by an outside observer may be said to be made from an
external point of view; a statement made by a member of the group who accepts and uses
the rules as a guide to conduct may be said to be made from an internal point of view.
Suppose that an observer watches the behavior of a certain group, for example, suppose
that he watches traffic approaching traffic lights, and records everything that happens.
After a while he concluded that red sign is for stop. But he may not know the reasons
immediately. But this way of looking at the matter is very different from that of the
people in the cars approaching the lights. For them it is a simple rule. Whenever it turns
red they stop. The observer was looking at the rule from an external point of view. The
person in the car looks at the rule from an internal point of view. Since social habits are
observable by an outsider, but the group is not aware of them, they have an external
aspect, but not an internal one. Social rules have both an external and internal aspect.
Remember, for example, the rule of the taking off of the hat inside a church. It can not
only be observable by outsiders but also felt by the members.
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Hence internal point of view signifies that the law would be taken as a standard by the
citizen to evaluate his own conduct and that it would be taken as a sufficient
reason/justification for an action or omission, and the external point of view emphasizes
that the law will be used not only to guide one’s own conduct but also to evaluate the
conduct of others. This is manifested by the conduct of members of society towards an
illegal act…social protest…reprimand or disapproval.
B. Social Rules
If something is a social rule, then we would find that such words as ‘ought’, ‘must’,
‘should’ are used in connection with it. Social rules are of two kinds.
i. Those which are no more than social conventions, for example, rules of etiquette
or rules of correct speech. These are more than habits, as a group strives to see
that the rules are observed, and those who break them are criticized.
ii. Rules which constitute obligations. A rule falls into this second category when
there is an insistent demand that members of the group conform, and when there
is great pressure brought to bear on those who break the rule, or threaten to do so.
Rules of this second kind are regarded as important because they are believed to be
necessary to maintain the very life of the society, or some highly prized aspect of it.
Examples are rules which restrict violence or which require promise to be kept. Rules of
this kind often involve some kind of sacrifice on the part of the person who has to comply
with the rule – a sacrifice for the benefit of the others in the society.
C. Obligations
Rules which constitute obligations may be sub-divided into two categories:
i. Rules which form part of the moral code of the society concerned: these rules are
therefore moral obligations. Such obligations may be wholly customary in origin.
There may be no central body responsible for punishing breaches of such rules,
the only form of pressure for conformity being a hostile reaction (stopping short
of physical action) towards a person who breaks the rule. The pressure for
conformity may take the form of words of disapproval, or appeals to the
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individual’s respect for the rule broken. The pressure may rely heavily on
inducing feelings of shame, remorse or guilt in the offender.
ii. Rules which take the form of law – even if a rudimentary or primitive kind of law.
A rule will come into this category if the pressure for conformity includes
physical sanctions against a person who breaks the rule – even if the sanctions are
applied, not by officials, but by the community at large.
In the case of both (i) and (ii), there is serious social pressure to conform to the rule, and
it is this which makes the rule an obligation (as opposed to mere social convention, or
even a habit).
Basically primary rules are rules that govern primitive society. These rules are not
legislated or made rather they evolve through the process of practice and acceptance.
Their validity is to be verified by checking whether they are accepted substantially by all
members of the community. However, such rules serve only a small number of people
and one that has close tribal relations. In other words, for reasons mentioned below,
primary rules no longer serve a modern society. A modern legal system must comprise
more than this; it must also include what Hart called secondary rules, the function of
which is exclusively addressed to the status of the primary rules. The secondary rules are
fundamentally different in kind from the primary rules. They bring primary rules into
being, they revise them, they uphold them, or they change them completely. In other
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words, secondary rules are those that stipulate how, and by whom, such primary rules
may be formed, recognized, modified or extinguished. The rules that stipulate how
parliament is composed, and how it enacts legislation, are examples of secondary rules.
Rules about forming contracts and executing wills are also secondary rules because they
stipulate how very particular rules governing particular legal obligations (i.e., the terms
of a contract or the provisions of a will) come into existence and are changed. Hart argues
that the creation of secondary rules marks the transition from a pre-legal society to a legal
system. Why? How? Let’s look at Hart in detail.
1. In view of human nature, the primary rules must include rules which
contain restrictions on violence, theft, and deception.
2. Although there may be a minority who reject the rules, the majority must
accept them.
3. The society must be a small one, with close ties of kinship, common
sentiments and beliefs.
4. The society must live in a stable environment.
If either of the last two conditions were not satisfied, the society could not continue to
exist by means of such a simple system of social control. In other words, if the society
was large and there was no relative stability, then, the primary rules would not continue
to exist. Specifically the following defects would show themselves.
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1) If doubts arose as to what the primary rules were, there would be no means of
resolving the uncertainty. There would be no procedure for determining what the
rules were (e.g. by referring to some authoritative text, or asking guidance from
an official whose function it was to decide such matters).
2) There would be no means of altering the rules according to changing
circumstances. The rules would be static.
3) There would be no means of settling a dispute as to whether a rule has been
broken. (This is the most serious defect of all.)
4) There would be no one with authority to impose punishments for breaches of the
rules. Conformity with the rules would only be secured by defuse social pressure,
or by punishments meted out by the group as a whole. This would be an
inefficient way of ensuring that the rules were observed. Unorganized efforts by
the group to catch and punish offenders would waste time: punishment inflicted
by individuals might lead to vendettas.
All these defects can be rectified by supplementing primary rules by other rules of
different kind, rules already referred to as secondary rules.
Secondary rules have something in common with primary rules and are connected with
them. Primary rules are concerned with what people must do or must not do. Secondary
rules are concerned with the primary rules in that they lay down the ways in which
primary rules may be introduced, varied, and abandoned; the way in which primary rules
may be ascertained; and the way in which it can be decided whether a primary rule has
been broken.
Thus, in effect, secondary rules can provide remedies for the defects listed above.
Following are these remedies.
1) The defect of uncertainty as to what the primary rules are, can be remedied by
having secondary rules which provide a way of knowing whether a suggested rule
is or is not in fact a rule of the group. There are many ways in which this can be
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achieved. For example it may become accepted that the rules are as written in
some text (e.g. statute). Or the secondary rule may be that a primary rule is to
become a rule of group if it is enacted by a certain body (e.g. parliament) or it is
decreed by a judge.
There may be more than one way of deciding what the primary rules are. And if
there is more than one way, there may be a means of resolving possible conflicts
by having an order of superiority (e.g. a proclamation overriding judicial
decisions). A secondary rule which enables one to know what the primary rules
are is referred to by Hart as a ‘rule of recognition’. If a society has a ‘rule of
recognition’ then it has a way of determining whether a law is valid or not.
2) The other defect (in society having only primary rules) that the rules are static can
be remedied by having secondary rules that provide for ways in which the
primary rules can be changed. Secondary rules of this kind, which are known as
‘rules of change’ may specify the persons who are to have power to alter the law,
and lay down the procedure to be followed in order to do so.
There may be a closed relation between rules of recognition and rules of change.
For example, it may be a rule of change that the king can change the law. It may
be a rule of recognition that what is enacted by the king is the law.
3) The third defect mentioned above under (3) can be remedied by having secondary
rules which enable any individual to find out whether or not a primary rule has
been broken. Such rules can lay down who is to decide this (e.g. a judge) and any
procedure which must be followed. These rules will be concerned with judges,
courts, jurisdiction and judgments. These are rules of adjudication. But what you
shall remember is that rules that confer power to a judge are rules of recognition.
4) The defect which we set out under (4) above can be remedied by having
secondary rules which prohibit individuals from taking into their own hands the
punishment of others for breach of primary rules, and instead provide for an
official system of penalties, with maximum penalties, administered by officials
(e.g. a judge). These rules provide the sanctions of the system.
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The structure made up of the combination of primary rules and secondary rules of
recognition, change and adjudication, and sanction imposing rules make up the heart of a
legal system.
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The Hart’s Diagram
Have an external
Social habits aspect only
Things that
Influence
Human
Have Conventions
Behavior internal
& external
Social rules aspect moral obligations
Obligations
Primary rules
Constituents
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The Rule of Recognition
The most fundamental of these secondary rules is what Hart calls ‘the rule of
recognition’. This is the rule to which the authority of all the primary rules is referred.
Dworkin in his book Taking Rights Seriously (Third Indian Reprint, 2005), pp.20-21
describes it as follows:
Primitive communities have only primary rules, and these are binding entirely because of
practices of acceptance. Such communities cannot be said to have ‘law,’ because there is
no way to distinguish a set of legal rules from amongst other social rules, as the first
tenet of positivism requires. But when a particular community has developed a
fundamental secondary rule that stipulates how legal rules are to be identified, the idea
of a distinct set of rules, and thus of law, is born.
Hart calls such a fundamental secondary rule a ‘rule of recognition’. The rule of
recognition of a given community may be relatively simple (‘What the king enacts is law’)
or it may be very complex (the United States Constitution, with all its difficulties of
interpretation, may be considered as a single rule of recognition). The demonstration that
a particular rule is valid may therefore require tracing a complicated chain of validity
back from that particular rule ultimately to the fundamental rule. Thus a parking
ordinance of a city of New Heaven is valid because it is adopted by a city council,
pursuant to the procedures and within the competence specified by the municipal law
adopted by the state of Connecticut, in conformity with the procedures and within the
competence specified by the constitution of the state of Connecticut, which was in turn
adopted consistently with the requirement of the United States Constitution.
We have to be clear about the sense in which Hart was a legal positivist. His concept of
law was certainly a radical revision of what had previously been known as positivism.
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This was due largely to its association with the command theory. Hart firmly believed, as
we have seen, that there was continuity as well as discontinuity between himself and the
Austinian tradition. What he objected to in the command theory was that it concealed the
real structure of law as the interplay between different types of rules, as revealed by his
own analysis. He did not, however, regard the command theory as a complete distortion.
Hart agrees with Austin that valid rules of law may be created through the acts of
officials and public institutions. But Austin thought that the authority of these institutions
lay only in their monopoly of power. Hart finds their authority in the background of
constitutional standards against which they act, constitutional standards that have been
accepted, in the form of a fundamental rule of recognition, by the community which they
govern. This background legitimates the decisions of government and gives them the cast
and call of obligation that the naked commands of Austin’s sovereign lacks. Thus Hart’s
criterion for the unity of a legal system is more general than Austin’s.
Summary
With the command theory displaced, Hart’s idea of a positivist approach to law is defined
by its commitment to two theses: the morality-law separation thesis and the thesis that
analysis of legal concepts should be the main task of jurisprudence.
As opposed to the separation thesis, the idea that the conditions of legal validity are at
least partly a matter of the moral content of the norms is articulated in a sophisticated
manner by Ronald Dworkin's legal theory. Dworkin is not a classical Natural Lawyer,
however, and he does not maintain that morally acceptable content is a precondition of a
norm's legality. His core idea is that the very distinction between facts and values in the
legal domain, between what the law is and what it ought to be, is much more blurred than
Legal Positivism would have it: Determining what the law is in particular cases
inevitably depends on moral-political considerations about what it ought to be. Evaluative
judgments partly determine what the law is.
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Dworkin's legal theory is not based on a general repudiation of the classical fact-value
distinction, as much as it is based on a certain conception of legal reasoning. This
conception went through two main stages. In the 1970's Dworkin argued that the
falsehood of Legal Positivism resides in the fact that it is incapable of accounting for the
important role that legal principles play in determining what the law is. Legal positivism
envisaged, Dworkin claimed, that the law consists of rules only. However, this is a
serious mistake, since in addition to rules, law is partly determined by legal principles.
The distinction between rules and principles is basically a logical one. Rules, Dworkin
maintained, apply in an ‘all or nothing fashion’. If the rule applies to the circumstances, it
determines a particular legal outcome. If it does not apply, it is simply irrelevant to the
outcome. On the other hand, principles do not determine an outcome even if they clearly
apply to the pertinent circumstances. Principles basically provide the judges with a reason
to decide the case one way or the other, and hence they only have a dimension of weight.
That is, the reasons provided by the principle may be relatively strong, or weak, but they
are never ‘absolute’. Such reasons, by themselves, cannot determine an outcome, as rules
do.
Dworkinn gives an example of a legal principle in the case of Riggs v Palmer (read
attachment B), in which a New York court had to decide whether a murderer could
inherit under the will of the grandfather he had murdered. The court held that the relevant
statutes literally gave the property of the deceased to the murderer. But then the court
reasoned:
…all laws as well as all contracts may be controlled in their operation and effect
by general, fundamental maxims of the common law. No one shall be permitted to
profit by his own fraud, or to take advantage of his own wrong, or to found any
claim upon his own iniquity, or to acquire property by his own crime.
As a result the court denies the murdered his inheritance. Such, kind of grounds are,
according to Dworkin, principles to which the courts may stretch their hands in the
absence of the legal rules emphasized by positivists like Hart. Yet positivists deny the
existence of such kinds of laws.
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The most interesting, and from a Positivist perspective, most problematic, aspect of legal
principles, however, consists in their moral dimension. According to Dworkin's theory,
unlike legal rules, which may or may not have something to do with morality, principles
are essentially moral in their content. It is, in fact, partly a moral consideration which
determines whether a legal principle exists or not. Why is that? Because a legal principle
exists, according to Dworkin, if the principle follows from the best moral and political
interpretation of past judicial and legislative decisions in the relevant domain. In other
words, legal principles occupy an intermediary space between legal rules and moral
principles. Legal rules are posited by recognized institutions and their validity derives
from their enacted source. Moral principles are what they are due to their content, and
their validity is purely content dependent. Legal principles, on the other hand, gain their
validity from a combination of source-based and content-based considerations. As
Dworkin put it in the most general terms: ‘According to law as integrity, propositions of
law are true if they figure in or follow from the principles of justice, fairness, and
procedural due process that provide the best constructive interpretation of the
community's legal practice.’ (Law's Empire, at p. 225) The validity of a legal principle
then, derives, from a combination of facts and moral considerations. The facts concern
the past legal decisions which have taken place in the relevant domain, and the
considerations of morals and politics concern the ways in which those past decisions can
best be accounted for by the correct moral principles.
Needless to say, if such an account of legal principles is correct, the separation thesis can
no longer be maintained. But many legal philosophers doubt that there are legal
principles of the kind Dworkin envisaged. There is an alternative, more natural way to
account for the distinction between rules and principles in the law: the relevant difference
concerns the level of generality, or vagueness, of the norm-act prescribed by the pertinent
legal norm. Legal norms can be more or less general, or vague, in their definition of the
norm-act prescribed by the rule, and the more general or vague they are, the more they
tend to have those quasi-logical features Dworkin attributes to principles.
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In the 1980's Dworkin radicalized his views about these issues, striving to ground his
anti-positivist legal theory on a general theory of interpretation, and emphasizing law's
profound interpretative nature. Despite the fact that Dworkin's interpretative theory of
law is extremely sophisticated and complex, the essence of his argument from
interpretation can be summarized in a rather simple way. The main argument consists of
two main premises. The first thesis maintains that determining what the law requires in
each and every particular case necessarily involves an interpretative reasoning. Any
statement of the form “According to the law in S, x has a right/duty etc., to y” is a
conclusion of some interpretation or other. Now, according to the second premise,
interpretation always involves evaluative considerations. More precisely, perhaps,
interpretation is neither purely a matter of determining facts, nor is it a matter of
evaluative judgment per se, but an inseparable mixture of both. Clearly enough, one who
accepts both these theses must conclude that the separation thesis is fundamentally
flawed. If Dworkin is correct about both theses, it surely follows that determining what
the law requires always involves evaluative considerations.
Both of Dworkin's two theses are highly contestable. Some legal philosophers have
denied the first premise, insisting that legal reasoning is not as thoroughly interpretative
as Dworkin assumes. Interpretation, according to this view, is an exception to the
standard understanding of language and communication, rendered necessary only when
the law is, for some reason, unclear. However, in most standard instances, the law can
simply be understood, and applied, without the mediation of interpretation. Other legal
philosophers denied the second premise, challenging Dworkin's thesis that interpretation
is necessarily evaluative.
Dworkin's legal theory shares certain insights with the Inclusive version of Legal
Positivism. Note, however, that although both Dworkin and Inclusive Legal Positivists
share the view that morality and legal validity are closely related, they differ on the
grounds of this relationship. Dworkin maintains that the dependence of legal validity on
moral considerations is an essential feature of law which basically derives from law's
profoundly interpretative nature. Inclusive Positivism, on the other hand, maintains that
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such a dependence of legal validity on moral considerations is a contingent matter; it does
not derive from the nature of law or of legal reasoning as such. Inclusive Positivists claim
that moral considerations affect legal validity only in those cases which follow from the
social conventions which prevail in a given legal system. In other words, the relevance of
morality is determined in any given legal system by the contingent content of that
society's conventions. As opposed to both these views, traditional, or as it is now called,
Exclusive Legal Positivism maintains that a norm is never rendered legally valid by
virtue of its moral content. Legal validity, according to this view, is entirely dependent on
the conventionally recognized factual sources of law.
It may be worth noting that those legal theories maintaining that legal validity partly
depends on moral considerations must also share a certain view about the nature of
morality, namely, they must hold an objective stance with respect to the nature of moral
values. Otherwise, if moral values are not objective and legality depends on morality,
legality would also be rendered subjective, posing serious problems for the question of
how to identify what the law is. Some legal theories, however, do insist on the
subjectivity of moral judgements, thus embracing the skeptical conclusions that follow
about the nature of law. According to these skeptical theories, law is, indeed, profoundly
dependent on morality, but, as these theorists assume that morality is entirely subjective,
it only demonstrates how the law is also profoundly subjective, always up for grabs, so to
speak. This skeptical approach, fashionable in so called post-modernist literature,
crucially depends on a subjectivist theory of values, which is rarely articulated in this
literature in any sophisticated way.
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and H.L.A. Hart on the issue of enforcement of morality, whether the law should enforce
morality or not.
The debate was initiated in 1957, when the Wolfenden Committee made two
recommendations to the government: (1) that private prostitution should remain legal,
and public soliciting be outlawed; and (2) that male homosexual acts in private between
consenting adults over the age of 21 should be legalized. What was of particular
importance was the Wolfenden view of the function of the criminal law, which was stated
with exceptional clarity as follows:
The function of the criminal law, as we see it, is to preserve public order and
decency, to protect the citizen from what is offensive or injurious, and to provide
safeguards against exploitation and corruption of others….particularly the
specially vulnerable, the young, weak and inexperienced…. It is not, in our view,
the function of the law to intervene in the private lives of citizens, or to seek to
enforce any particular pattern of behaviour.
the importance which society and the law ought to give to individual freedom of
choice and action in matter of private morality. Unless deliberate attempt is to be
made by society, acting through the agency of the law, to equate the sphere of
crime with that of sin, there must remain a realm of private morality which is, in
brief and crude terms, not the law’s business.
In short, Wolfenden was advocating a new spirit of tolerance. Any private individual
activities that presented no threat to other citizens, or to the maintenance of public order
and decency, should remain beyond the reach of the criminal law. It should be noted that
the emphasis of the recommendation was firmly on the private sphere; there were no
liberal implications for the publication or public display of pornography, or any other
kind of public behaviour that might be found offensive. Also the spirit of the report was
morally neutral, in that it passed no judgment on what was taking place in private place.
It simply declared that it was none of the law’s business.
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But what is private or public morality in this sense? This is a question that must be
answered. Does private mean here ‘out of public view’, or does it mean that it is the
individuals business? Are privacy and publicness separate? What is harm? We shall
discuss them briefly.
The findings of the Wolfenden Committee were clearly based on Mill’s classic essay On
Liberty. In one of the most influential statements in modern political and legal
philosophy, Mill had declared that:
This is, as one might recall from the reading of Mill, called the principle of harm.
According to this principle, there is no justification for the use of the law (i.e. mankind
collectively) against citizens for any purpose other than the prevention of harm to other
citizens. The law is limited in its function to the ‘self-defense’ of society, and is
legitimately employed if an individual’s action is threatening society in some way. The
second point Mill is making is that the law should also be limited to protecting people
against others, not against themselves. These two points are easy to conflate, under the
heading of a single ‘no-harm’ principle, but they need to be kept distinct. According to
the first point, if there is no threat to others, there is no justification for legal intervention.
According to the second point, if the action is only a threat to the agent, there is no
justification. The first point is an argument against legal moralism, or the enforcement of
moral norms regardless of whether there is any danger. The second point is an argument
against paternalism, or the interference in a person’s freedom of action, when it is
ostensibly for that person’s own good.
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4.5.3.3. Lord Patrick Devlin
Lord Patrick Devlin, a prominent British High Court Judge and philosopher, was the first
and foremost to attack the conclusion and the rationale behind the conclusion of the
Wolfenden Report. In a lecture entitled The Enforcement of Morals, Devlin defended
society’s right to pass judgment on all matters of morality, but especially on what he
described as “society’s constitutive morality”. The detail of his argument is presented in
the following pages.
On Consent
One of the conclusions of the committee was that male homosexual acts in private
between consenting adults over the age of 21 should be legalized. As far as it is made
between consenting adults, it is none of the law’s business. Here, there are two essential
elements, namely: consent and majority (above the age of 21 years).
Devlin’s attack begins and concentrates on the first element, consent. According to
Devlin, consent is not a sufficient ground for an action to be private morality and thereby
a private issue, not the law’s (or the society’s) concern. In effect, it means consent can
overcome any immoral action. Devlin argues that this is inconsistent with the
fundamental principles of criminal law. The criminal law of England (and other countries
for that matter) has concerned itself with moral principles. Subject to certain exceptions
inherent in the nature of particular crimes, the criminal law has never permitted consent
of the victim to be used as a defense. For example, consent of the victim is not a defense
in a murder charge. That is why the victim cannot forgive the aggressor in a criminal act
and require the prosecutor to drop the case. Consent and forgiveness are irrelevant. He
also mentioned criminal offences like suicide, attempt to suicide, euthanasia (killing
another at his own request), incest between brother and sister, abortion, duel etc. All these
may be acts committed privately and between consenting adults. But they are still crimes
and prohibited by law. Why? Because, according to Devlin, ‘it is an offence against
society….there are certain standards of behaviour or moral principles which society
requires to be observed; and the breach of them is an offence not merely against the
person who is injured but against society as a whole’.
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His argument here is that if consent between prostitutes and their clients, and between
adult homosexuals, is made the basis of their legality, then consistency will demand that
all of these other acts are legalized as well.
This shows, according to Devlin, that the criminal law is based on moral grounds and the
function of the law is enforcement of moral principles and nothing else.
In an attempt to answer this question, Lord Devlin has framed three questions addressed
to himself to answer:
a) Has society the right to pass judgment at all on matters of morals? Ought there, in
other words, to be a public morality, or are morals always a matter for private
judgment?
b) If society has the right to pass judgment, has it also the right to use the weapon of
the law to enforce it?
c) If so, ought it to use the weapon in all cases or only in some; and if only in some,
on what principles should it distinguish?
a) Regarding the first question his answer is in the positive. Yes, there is a shared
morality. Yes, there is a public morality. Society is a community of ideas. These
ideas could be moral or political. These ideas are foundations or bondages to the
unity of the society. He gives marriage as an example. For example, in the
western Christian society marriage is concluded between one man and one
woman. The moral background which emanated from Christianity forbids bigamy
or polygamy. So the idea of this morality, which is adopted by the couple, serves
as a base for the continuity of the marriage institution. One cannot remove this
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morality without bringing down the marriage itself. If one of the spouses commits
adultery (which is immoral) with another consenting adult, this immoral act will
be felt by the other spouse and the marriage will collapse. In other words, ‘the
institution of marriage would be gravely threatened if individual judgments were
permitted about the morality of adultery; on these points there must be a public
morality’. There is such thing as public morality and society has the right to make
judgment on morality.
…without shared idea on politics, morals, and ethics no society can exist.
Each one of us has ideas about what is good and what is evil; they cannot
be kept private from the society which we live. If men and women try to
create a society in which there is no fundamental agreement about good
and evil they will fail; if, having based it on common agreement, the
agreement goes, the society will disintegrate. For society is not something
that is kept together physically; it is held by the invisible bonds of common
thought. If the bonds were too far relaxed the members would drift apart.
A common morality is part of the bondage. The bondage is part of the
price of society; and mankind, which needs society, must pay its price.
b) In the above we have seen the existence of public morality and that society has
the right to judge morality. In this second part, Devlin answers the next question:
has society the right to pass law to enforce morality? Lord Devlin says:
…if society has the right to make a judgment and has it on the basis that a
recognized morality is necessary to society as, say, a recognized
government, then society may use the law to preserve morality in the same
way as it uses it to safeguard anything else that is essential to its
existence. If therefore the first proposition is securely established with all
its implications, society has a prima facie right to legislate against
immorality as such.
But what is the rationale behind? In other words, why should society be given this
power? Devlin analogizes morality to a government, and immorality to treason. An
established government is necessary for the existence of society. Treason
(conspiracy to overthrow the government) is in effect against the security of the
society. An established morality is as necessary as a good government to the
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welfare of the society. Society disintegrates within more frequently than they are
broken up by external pressures. Historically, the fracture of common morality is
the first stage of disintegration of a society. Thus, the suppression of vice (immoral
acts) is as much the law’s business as the suppression of subversive activities.
Hence, Devlin concludes that: ‘it is no more possible to define a sphere of private
morality than it is to define one of private subversive activity. There are no
theoretical limits to the power of the state to legislate against morality.’
c) In what circumstances should the state exercise its power is the third of the
framed questions. Now this is a tough question. It is obvious that the
society/government cannot forbid every kind of immoral act. For example,
refusing to share your wealth with your poor neighbor may be immoral, but
difficult to incorporate into the criminal law. Thus, Devlin prefers to be selective.
But how are the moral judgments of society to be ascertained? Who decides that
an act is immoral so as to condemn it to illegality? In whose eye is an act to be
immoral? What are the clues for the legislature?
Devlin takes the judgment of a reasonable man. A reasonable man should not be
confused with a rational man, however. A reasonable man is the man in the street,
a man with a right frame of mind. The reasonable man ‘is not expected to reason
about anything and his judgment may be largely a matter of feeling’. ‘Immorality
then, for the purpose of law, is what every right-minded person is presumed to
consider being immoral.’ Moreover, it must be ‘capable of affecting society.´
One point which should be noted is that this argument seeks to establish a
conclusion diametrically opposed to that of Mill. Where Mill argued that there
was an empirical link between a healthy and enduring society and allowance of
maximum freedom to individuals in choice of moral principles and lifestyle,
Devlin argues that it is a necessary truth that without individual conformity
with the consensus, society will collapse.
Restraints
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It may be dismaying that Lord Devlin argues that any immoral acts can be made illegal if
the reasonable man feels so. Yet, there are about three guidelines for the legislature
follow before outlawing a certain immoral act. What are they?
i. Nothing should be punished by law that does not lie beyond the limits of
tolerance. Devlin says an immoral act which is tolerated by the society need not to
be outlawed. Now, you may ask: when will an action be beyond tolerance. Devlin
puts three kinds of feelings that can lead us to the conclusion: intolerance,
indignation, and disgust. Thus, if the man on the street becomes intolerant,
indignant and disgusted by a certain action, that is a good clue for the legislature
to act. Devlin asks for maximum tolerance. It is nevertheless a vague and highly
subjective standard that he is proposing, which opens the door to the perpetuation
of popular prejudice as the guiding force behind the use of the criminal law.
ii. Laws should be slow in matters of moral. The human mind always needs greater
freedom of thought. After a time the mind can become accustomed to an action
and relaxed. The feeling of society or its moral standard on a certain matter is
different from generation to generation. Thus since tolerance can be shifted soon,
the legislature shall act slowly.
iii. As far as possible privacy should be respected. ‘English man’s home is his
castle.’ This shows that privacy is something respected. Devlin says for the sake
of respect for privacy, police should not violate individual privacy unless a
complaint is made for investigation.
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use of the criminal law to enforce morals was deeply misguided. Much more in step than
Devlin with the liberalizing spirit of the early 196Os, Hart set out to undermine moral
conservatism and to defend the Wolfenden contention that there is an area of private
behaviour which should be no business of the criminal law.
Mindful at the outset of the vulnerability of Mill’s libertarian position to a criticism of its
dangerous implications, Hart took care to distinguish between coercion for the sake of
enforcing society’s moral norms, and coercion for the agent’s own good. According to
the version of liberalism which Hart was developing in these lectures, it is only the latter
form of state coercion which is to some extent defensible. Society does have the right to
prevent its members from harming themselves as much as from harming others, but it
does not have the right to enforce conformity with collective moral standards. The
particular example he has in mind here is the prohibition of the sale and use of hard
drugs, which is justified on paternalistic grounds. In the name of liberty, Mill had
opposed any state interference into such activities, but Hart sets a new limit to the ‘no-
harm’ principle, which is in fact a more literal interpretation of this phrase. What he
argues is that the proper reach of the criminal law stops at the point of tangible harm as
such - to self or others - whereas for Mill it stops only at the point of harm to others.
What Hart endorses in Mill is his defense of the right to follow one’s own lifestyle; what
he rejects is his insistence that this right has no internal limits.
With this modified version of Mill’s defense of individual liberty to hand, Hart was able
to confront Devlin’s arguments on more solid ground. One of his main complaints about
Devlin’s case against liberty is that he blurs the distinction between paternalist law and
what Hart now labels ‘legal moralism’. This is the distinction between laws for people’s
own protection (e.g. to prohibit one from using drugs for the sake of his safety) and laws
which merely seek to enforce moral standards (e.g. to prohibit one from committing
private homosexual activity). It is easy to see how this distinction can be blurred and the
issue confused. If behaviour deemed to be immoral, it is widely regarded as by definition
harmful and self- destructive; laws prohibiting it will be seen as paternalistic and
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defensible. In Devlin’s view, both are immoral and shall be forbidden; but in Hart’s view
only the first one shall be included in the criminal law.
With this distinction now drawn clearly, however, it becomes a question of whether
Devlin’s other arguments are strong or not.
Hart disputes Devlin's thesis saying that ‘it assumes that immorality jeopardizes society,
when in fact there is no evidence of that proposition.’ There are no empirical or practical
evidences that show that the change of morality of a society is followed by its
destruction. While Hart conceded that some shared morality is essential to the existence
of society, he questioned Devlin's leap from there to the proposition that a change in
society's morality is tantamount to destroying it-- that society is equal to its morality--
because that implies that the morality of a society cannot change, or rather that if it does,
one society is actually disappearing, and being replaced by another. According to Hart,
Devlin's argument amounts to an assertion that law should preserve existing morality, not
that legal enforcement of morality is good in and of itself. By contrast, Hart asserted that
society cannot only survive individual differences in morality but can profit from them,
though he does not specify exactly how it might profit. The idea is society can live with
its differences. We can call it in our own way as unity in diversity; don’t you agree?
Hart also said that even if there is a valid argument for the legal enforcement of morality,
Devlin's argument as to how that morality should be ascertained is flawed: ". . . no one
should think even when popular morality is supported by an 'overwhelming majority'
marked by widespread ' intolerance, indignation, and disgust' that loyalty to democratic
principles requires him to admit that its imposition on a minority is justified." Hart's view
of the connection between society and society's morality is more flexible than Devlin's. A
society's morality can change without the society disappearing and democracy does not
require the enforcement of uniform morality, as Devlin suggested.
In place of Devlin's justification for the full enforcement of morality, Hart developed his
own argument for the partial enforcement of morality based on a distinction he drew
between immorality which affronts public decency and that which merely 'distresses'
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others based on the knowledge that immoral acts are taking place. In Hart's view, society
may, for example, outlaw the public expression of bigamy or prostitution, because such
could be considered an affront to public decency, as a nuisance, while it would not be
justifiable to outlaw purely private manifestations of these types of behavior, or of
consensual homosexual behavior in private, even though some might claim to be
distressed by the private behavior as well. At this point, Hart viewed it as a matter of
balancing the distress from the knowledge that something immoral is taking place with
individual liberty: "[n]o social order which values individual liberty could also value the
right to be protected from this type of distress."
1. What are the three basic criticisms made by Hart against Austin?
2. Discuss the internal and external aspects of a rule.
3. In a society without a legal system what kind of laws can exist? What are the
defects of this system? What are the solutions given by Hart?
4. Which rules are the sources of legal validity?
5. What makes Hart positivist like Austin?
6. Briefly discuss Dworkin’s criticism made against Hart’s concept of law.
7. What are the three questions framed by Lord Devlin?
8. Discuss public vs. private morality.
9. Is there a division of public and private morality in Devlin’s view?
10. Why is morality so important for society (why do we need legal enforcement of
morality)?
11. Is there a limit for enforcement of morality in Devlin’s argument? Do you think
every kind of immoral act should be made illegal? What are Devlin’s restraining
measures here?
12. Mention at least two criticisms by Hart against Devlin.
13. Discuss briefly Mill’s position on individual liberty.
14. Compared to the diametrically opposite position of Mill and Devlin, where do you
put Hart’s approach? What is his version of argument?
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4.6. Summary
In this chapter we tried to discuss legal positivism based on the works of writers such as
Hume, Bentham, Austin, Hart, and Kelsen. All of them insist on the analytical separation
of law from morality. In no case, however, does this imply that morality is unimportant.
But it does entail the claim that clear thinking about the nature of law necessitates
treating it as a distinct phenomenon capable of being analyzed without invoking moral
judgment. Hence, as Austin explains in a famous passage: ‘the existence of law is one
thing; its merit or demerit is another.’ A law, which actually exists is a law, though we
happen to dislike it. It is this kind of law that a positivist takes as a law and applies for
study.
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UNIT FIVE
Introduction
The so called historical school of the nineteenth century, led by the different theories of
von Savigny and Henry Maine, shows us that law cannot be fully understood until its
historical and social context is studied and appreciated. The present unit will give a
concise survey of the legal theories of the historical school of the German Savigny and
English jurist Maine.
The sociological school of jurisprudence is largely a product of the 20th century. Its
approach to the analysis of law differs from that of the other schools in that it is
concerned less with the nature and origin of law than with its actual functions and end
results. The proponents of sociological jurisprudence seek to view law within a broad
social context rather than as an isolated phenomenon distinct from and independent of
other means of social control. The sociological questions in jurisprudence are concerned
with the actual effects of the law upon the complex of attitudes, behaviour, organization,
environment, skills, and powers involved in the maintenance of a particular society. They
are also concerned with practical improvement of the legal system and feel that this can
be achieved only if legislation and court adjudications take into account the findings of
other branches of learning, particularly the social sciences. The main propagators of this
school of jurisprudence are Eugen Ehrlich and Roscoe Pound.
Objectives
After reading and learning this chapter students will be able to;
• Understand the end of law from historical and sociological school perspective
• Know the genesis of law from both schools perspective
• Explain Pound’s theory of interest
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5.1 Historical School
For the purpose of this chapter, we shall take the theories of von Savigny and of Maine
together. They represent two very different approaches to an understanding of law and
the legal process.
The first is that the law of a nation, like its language, originates in the popular spirit, the
common conviction of right, and has already attained a fixed character, peculiar to that
people, before the earliest time to which authentic history extends. In this prehistoric
period the laws, language, manners and political constitution of a people are inseparably
united and they are the particular faculties and tendencies of an individual people bound
together by their kindred consciousness of inward necessity. This popular spirit
(Volksgeist) is the foundation of all of a nation’s subsequent legal development. Custom
is its manifestation. The popular spirit is shown, for example, in the various symbolic acts
by which legal transactions are solemnized. The origin of the popular spirit is veiled in
mysticism, and its crude beginnings are colored with romanticism.
But Savigny knew that the popular spirit did not create the complex system of rights in
land in Roman law or in any other advanced culture. Accordingly, he supplemented his
‘popular spirit’ origin with the theory that the jurists (legal scholars including professors
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and judges), who become legal specialists with the advance of civilization, are the
representatives of the community spirit and are thus authorized to carry on the law in its
technical aspects. Then after, law has a twofold existence: First, as part of the aggregate
life of the community, and, secondly, as a distinct branch of knowledge in the hands of
the jurists. Thus legal history has the ‘holy duty’ of maintaining a lively connection
between a nation’s present and its primitive state; to lose this connection will deprive the
people of the best part of their spiritual life.
In short, his three stage developmental process is that fist he sees principles of law
deriving from the conviction of the people; second, law reaches its pinnacle, with juristic
skills which he calls the “political element in law” added to these convections. It is at his
stage that codification is desirable, to retain the perfection of the system. The third stage
is one of decay.
What idea in Savigny’s theory still have value for our times jurisprudence? His
distinction between the ‘political’ and ‘technical’ elements in law is essentially the same
to the modern time thinkers like Cardozo. The principle also provides greater latitude to
Law professors in assisting technically the development and improvement of law, which
is common in today’s world. It seems in today’s Ethiopia law faculties are given such a
chance in drafting and improving existing laws.
Evaluation
The whole concept of Savigny’s discussion of the Volksgeist is said to be obscure. The
whole concept of the work, the spirit of the people, is difficult to accept for any less than
homogenous, or pluralistic, society. Nineteenth century Germany may have fitted the
concept, but it is relatively rare to find societies of which the same can be said. Some
fundamentalist Muslim societies might fit his model.
The German historical school had a profound influence upon jurisprudence and legal
scholarship, and even some influence on legal practice, in England and in the United
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States. England already had its own historical jurists in Coke, who glorified the English
common law as at once the common custom of the realm and the embodiment of reason.
Moreover, Blackstone, whose theory that judges only find in? The law is akin to the
popular-spirit idea of Savigny.
The chief representative of the historical school in England was Sir Henry Maine who
was for many years professor of civil law at Cambridge. Maine partly accepted Savigny’s
view of the importance of primitive legal institutions when he said that the rudimentary
ideas of early law are to the jurist what the primary crusts of the earth are to the geologist.
“They contain,” he said, “potentially all the forms in which law has subsequently
exhibited itself.” While this may seem to be the Volksgeist garbed in a scientific analogy,
Maine departed from Savigny in two important respects: he believed in stages of legal
evolution, in which the primitive ideas might be discarded; and he sought to discover by
comparative studies of different systems of law the ideas which they had in common.
With regard to jurisprudence Maine’s chief contribution is his analysis of legal change.
After due study of laws of the ancient world, Maine comes to the conclusion that the
development of legal systems followed a pattern of six stages. Static societies passed
through the first three stages; progressive societies then moved through at least some of
the latter three. Maine stated that the origins of legal development can be traced to
religion and ritual. This can be seen in societies that never developed literacy, at least so
far as the majority of their population are concerned. Their ritual is used as a means of
education in circumstances where it would be futile to reduce instructions into writings.
Examples of ritual washing may demonstrate this point. From this initial pool of ritual
and religion flowed the stream of the development of the law. The pattern of
development that Maine was so concerned to identify was as follows.
Royal Judgments
Royal judgments, divinely inspired, were the first stage. This was a primitive stage which
should not be confused with the command of a sovereign as it was not a law making
process, but dispute settlement. An example is the story of King Solomon and the two
mothers, proposing to divide the live baby in two as the mothers could not agree on who
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was the real mother. There was no rule or principle that King Solomon was applying.
Within the context of Maine’s theory it can be observed firstly that it was to King
Solomon that the parties turned for resolution of the dispute and secondly that the was
divinely inspired in order to draw out the real mother who could rather have her child live
but away from her than die.
Custom
Custom and the dominion of aristocracies follow royal judgments; the prerogative of the
king passes to different types of aristocracies (in the east religious; in the west, civil or
political), which were universally the depositaries and administrators of law. What the
juristical oligarchy now claims is to monopolize the knowledge of the laws, to have
exclusive possession of the principles by which quarrels are decided. Customs or
observances now exist as a substantive aggregate, and are assumed to be precisely known
to an aristocratic order or caste (interestingly in England it was judges). This is the stage
of unwritten law; knowledge of the principles is retained by being kept by a limited
number.
Codes
The third stage is the period of codes. This is when written and published laws replace
usages deposited with the recollection of a privileged oligarchy. This is not an era of
change, but rather a period at which, because of the invention of writings, the usage are
written down as a better method of storage. In Roman law, the Twelve Tables, and in
England the gradual move to written law reports, represent the code stage.
Static societies stop here and progressive societies move on. The major difference of the
next three stages from the first three is that they are stages of deliberate change. Most of
the changes in the content of law in those first stages were the result of spontaneous
development. But to move to the next step it needed a deliberate act which according to
Maine consists of the following three stages.
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Legal fictions
That is any assumption which conceals, or affects to conceal, the fact that a rule of law
has undergone alteration, its letter remaining unchanged, its operation being modified.
Examples would be false allegations in writs to give a court jurisdiction.
Equity
The development of a separate body of rules, existing alongside the original law and
claiming superiority over it by virtue of an inherent sanctity, is a second mode of progress
and change. Such a body grew up under the Roman praetors, and the English chancellors.
Legislation
This is the final stage of the development sequence. It is the enactment of a legislature in
the form of either an autocrat prince, or a sovereign assembly (parliament). These
encasements are authoritative because of the authority of the body and not, as with
equity, because of something inherent n the content of the principles.
Criticism
In a single sentence, we may evaluate Maine’s contribution to jurisprudence by saying
that while his conclusions have not been proved, his scientific and empirical method was
the forerunner of much modern jurisprudence and sociology.
Some doubt the sequential development of a legal system of which Maine wrote. They
argue that considerable latitude is inherent in the content of primitive people’s customary
practice. It is not clear that primitive societies move through the first three stages, nor that
they are static. Some studies of primitive tribes show use of legislation, for example. Nor
is it clear that the Anglo-Roman experience of fictions and equity as the first two
progressive stages is universally experienced. An evolution along the six-stage pattern
should not be expected for every legal system.
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of its people, Ehrlich’s sociological conception of law located the law in the present-day
institutions of its society. In his book, Fundamental Principles of the Sociology of Law,
he points the law’s place in society:
At present as well as at any other time, the center of gravity of legal development
lies not in legislation, nor in juristic science (jurisprudence), nor in judicial
decision, but in society itself.
While studying the effects of written law on the day to day commercial activities, Ehrlich
was led to the conception of the Living Law of a community. He argued that there was a
living law independent of legal propositions and that this living law is a proper study of
the science of law:
This then is the living law in contradistinction to that which is being enforced in
the courts and other tribunals. The living law is the law which dominates life itself
even though it has not been posited in legal propositions. The source of our
knowledge of this law is, first, the modern legal document; secondly, direct
observation of life, of commerce, of customs, and usages, and of all associations,
not only those that the law has recognized but also of those that it has overlooked
and passed by, indeed even of those it has disapproved. (Patterson P. 79)
He noted that earlier legal theories that recognize law as a sum of statutes and judgments
gave an inadequate view of the legal reality of a community. He drew a distinction
between norms of decision and social norms or norms of conduct. The latter actually
govern the life in a society and can be regarded in popular consciousness, if not
necessarily by lawyers, as law. For example, commercial usage and custom may develop
and be recognized and respected by courts of law. The point Ehrlich sought to make was
that the "living law" which regulates social life may be quite different from the norms for
decision applied by courts. Norms for decision regulate only those disputes that are
brought before a judicial or other tribunal. Living law is a framework for the routine
structuring of social relationships. Its source is in the many different kinds of social
associations in which people co-exist. Its essence is not dispute and litigation, but peace
and co-operation.
There were jurists in Europe by that time who believed that people should be governed
and administered by the written-books. They needed to be reminded that law is only one
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means of social control. Although, there are still critics against calling ‘law’ those living
laws, Ehrlich’s conception of Living Law was a useful rhetorical device to call attention
to his real contribution, the sociological method of inquiry into the grounds for making
and interpretation of law. In his other work he made a stern attack against the traditional
understanding of law and legal doctrine was followed:
For most lay people and for many lawyers it is evident today that the main task of
judicial decision-making is to deduce the decisions in the individual case from
what the laws and statutes say. There is so much which is not evident from this
evidence that it takes the combined forces of the theory of knowledge, legal
history, logic, psychology and sociology to find out where this assumption which
dominates all of the modern jurisprudence comes from, what it means, how far it
reaches and where it leads to.
In his sociological study he observed that what the law-books said and what actually are
followed by the people as well as by courts are different. It is this approach that enabled
him to show that law in his town as in ancient Rome had none of the qualities that legal
doctrine attributed to it but a host of qualities on which legal doctrine had nothing to say.
It was this gap between the law as it operated and what legal doctrine said it was which
fascinated Ehrlich from his earliest works.
Ehrlich tried to show this discrepancies by studying and analyzing ‘social associations’.
He did identify a great number of associations ranging from family, inheritance, clan, or
tribe to state, nation, or the community of nations. The associations could be religious,
political, economic or social in character. All these associations have ‘inner order’ which
has a character of law, but developed long ago before the creation of the positive law.
Examples, the rules followed in marriage or inheritance by the people have nothing to do
with the positive law. Not only that but also that they originated a long time ago. And he
concluded that such inner order of associations still exists independent of the positive
law, and hence courts need to consider such rules during decision giving.
This approach of law has great similarity with the present realism approach. From its
inception this approach has indeed impressed the American Realists and especially
Roscoe Pound, the American leader of the Sociological school of law.
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5.2.2 Law in Action: Roscoe Pound
5.2.2.1 General
Pound was the principal advocate of the sociological based study of the law in the United
States. His concern was to examine law in action as opposed to the topic of law in books.
In a series of law review articles published between 1905 and 1923, Roscoe Pound of the
Harvard Law School discusses different issues pertaining to the sociological concept of
law. All his philosophy (Programs of Sociological Jurisprudence) is included and
classified in to six main points:
• The first is the study of the actual social effects of legal institutions and legal
doctrines.
• The second is sociological study in preparation for law making. It is not enough
to study other legislation analytically. It is much more important, says this school,
to study its social operation and the effects it produces when put into action.
• The third point is study of the means of making legal rules effective. This has
been neglected almost entirely in the past. But the life of the law is in its
enforcement, and accordingly Pound considers it part of the jurist’s work to study
the question of how best to bring about effective enforcement of law.
• The fourth point is sociological legal history, that is, a study not only of how
legal rules have evolved and developed, but also of how they have worked in
practice and of the social effects they have produced and of the manner in which
they have produced them.
• The fifth point is the importance of reasonable and just decisions in individual
cases. In general this school conceives of the legal rules as guide to the judge,
leading him toward the just result, but insists that within wide limits he should be
free to deal with the individual case so as to meet the demands of justice between
the parties.
• Finally, the sociological jurists stress the point that the end of juristic study is to
make effort more effective in achieving the purposes of law.
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If we compare sociological jurisprudence with the concept of the three other (Natural,
Analytical, and Historical) schools the following characteristics may be emphasized:
• It is concerned more with the working of the law than its abstract content.
• It regards the law as a social institution capable of improvement by intelligent
human effort, and it considers that it is the sociologist jurist’s duty to discover the
best means of aiding and directing such effort.
• It emphasizes the social purposes which law subserves rather than its sanction.
• It looks upon legal doctrines, rules and standards functionally and regard the form
as a matter of means only.
Roscoe Pound, who ranks in America as the founder of “sociological Jurisprudence” was
the first to turn Holmes’ criticisms into complete new program. Pound and his school saw
a legal system as being a phenomenon which intimately interacts with the prevalent
political, economic, and social circumstances in a given society and which constantly
alters with them in a living process of development. They are not interested in the
abstract content of rules or in the logical and analytical connections which may exist
between them in a particular system. What they want to discover about legal rules is what
concrete effects in social reality they aim to produce as soon as they become “law in
action” by the behaviour of judges or administrative authorities.
Thus for Pound, law is in the first place a means for the ordering of social interests, and
the judge in balancing out these interests should be a “social engineer” who can only
perform his task properly if he has an accurate knowledge of the actual circumstances on
which his decision will have an effect.
Pound in his first works attacked the existing legal education which depended more on
theoretical concepts and only inward looking. He insisted that teachers of law should
have a wider knowledge:
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by which they decide, but quite as much the circumstance and conditions, social
and economic, to which these principles are to be applied…..and the state of
popular thought and feeling which makes the environment in which the principles
must operate in practice. Legal monks who pass their lives in an atmosphere of
pure law, from which every worldly and human element is excluded, cannot shape
practical principles to be applied to the restless world of flesh and blood.
In the nineteenth century the prevalent idea was that the end of law was to promote or
allow the maximum of free individual self assertion. The individual human will was the
central point of jurisprudence. But ‘‘by the end of the last and the beginning of the
present century,’’ says Pound, ‘‘a new way of thinking grew up. Jurists began to think in
terms of human wants or desires rather than of human wills. They began to think that
what they had to do was not simply to equalize or harmonize the satisfaction of wants.
They began to weigh or balance and reconcile claims or wants or desires, as formerly
they had balanced or reconciled wills. They began to think of the end of law not as a
maximum satisfaction of self-assertion, but as a maximum of wants. Hence for a time they
thought of the problem of ethics, of jurisprudence, and of politics as chiefly one of
valuing; as a problem of finding criteria of the relative value of interests. In
jurisprudence and politics they saw that we must add practical problems of the possibility
of making interests effective through governmental action, judicial or administrative. But
the first question was one of the wants to be recognized-of the interest to be recognized
and secured. Having inventoried the wants or claims or interests which are asserting and
for which legal security is sought, we were to value them, select those to be recognized,
determine the limits within which they were to be given effect in view of other recognized
interests, and ascertain how far we might give them effect by law in view of the inherent
limitation upon effective legal action.’’
Difficulties arise chiefly in connection with criteria of value. Philosophers have failed to
discover any method or valuation which commands general assent. Pound frankly admits
this difficulty, but says that it is not for the jurists to solve the problem. All the jurists
need do is to recognize the problem and perceive that it is presented to him as one of
securing all social interest so far as he may, of maintaining a balance or harmony among
them that is compatible with the securing of all of them. ‘‘I am content,’’ says Pound,
‘‘with a picture of satisfying as much of the whole body of human wants as we may with
the least sacrifice. I am content to think of law as a social institution to satisfy social
wants-the claim and demands involved in the existence of civilized society- by giving
effect to as much as we may with the least sacrifice, so far as such wants may be satisfied
or such claims given effect by an ordering of human conduct through politically
organized society.’’
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Now returning to Pound’s Theory of Interest, he defines an interest as a claim or want
or desire of a human being or group of human beings which the human being or group of
human beings seeks to satisfy, and of which, therefore, the ordering of human relations in
civilized society must take account. The first task of the jurist is to take a census of the
claims and demands actually asserted. The next is to generalize them in terms of social
interests because the concern of the law, as a social institution, is strictly only with social
interests. It is the social interest in securing the individual interest that determines the
law to secure the latter. The third task confronting the jurist is to decide on the principles
upon which conflicting interests should be weighed or balanced in order to determine the
extent to which the respective interests are to be secured. Thereafter, the jurists must
consider the means by which the law may secure the interests which it recognizes, and in
this connection we must take account of the limitations upon effective legal action which
preclude the complete securing of these interests. It is important to remember, that these
interests are not created by the law; they exist independently of the law. It is the task of
the law to take cognizance of their existence and to secure them, subject to the conditions
already mentioned.
Pound points out that though the law is, strictly speaking, concerned only with social
interests, it is nevertheless convenient to classify interests as individual, public and
social. Recognition of individual interests as Pound shows, follows the recognition of
group interests. In ancient law, as you doubtless know, the group was the unit and the
individual had no legal persona apart from the group. But with the development of
commerce .and trade individual interests gradually grew out of the group interests and
became recognized and secured by the law until we reach what may be called the
apotheosis of individual interests in the Natural Law philosophers of the eighteenth
century. It is important to remember that there is a social interest in the securing of
individual interests with a view to protecting the individual moral and social life. Hence
there is not, as Pound shows, a conflict between individual and social interests. There is
a problem of balancing the social interest in the individual life with other social interests;
which is, of course, a very different thing.
Pound classifies individual interests as (1) Interests of personality; (2) Interests in the
domestic relationships; and (3) Interests of substance. Let us consider first the interests
of personality. These Pound divides under three heads:-
(1) the physical person,
(2) honour and reputation,
(3) belief and opinion.
It is clear that there is an individual interest in the inviolability of the physical person. In
this connection three questions are pertinent: firstly, what is the extent of this interest;
secondly, how far has this interest been recognised by the law; and thirdly, how far is this
interest protected by law to-day. In regard to the extent of the interest Pound shows that
it covers five points: (1) Immunity of the body from direct or indirect injury; (2)
Preservation and furtherance of bodily health; (3) Immunity of the will from coercion;
(4) Immunity of the mind and the nervous system from injury; ( 5) Preservation and
furtherance of mental health. The first three interests have long been recognised by the
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law and are secured by the law to-day. The last two interests present a new problem, and
the law thereon is still in a process of growth. Pound's view is that the difficulties in
regard to the recognition and securing of these two interests are largely practical ones of
proof, and that so long as the chances of fraudulent claims remain as large as at present
these phases of the interest of personality must remain insufficiently secured. But he adds
that though we should recognise such practical difficulties we must not forget that a
man's feelings are as much a part of his personality as his limbs. It is to be hoped that the
actions which protect the latter from injury will in the ordinary course of legal
development be made to protect the former also.
The second interest of personality, namely, the interest in honour and reputation is
equally as important as the interest in the inviolability of the physical person, but it is
much more difficult to secure legally. In determining the nature and extent of the interest
in honour Pound stresses the importance of distinguishing it from the interest in
reputation as part of one's substance. The former is the claim of the individual to be
secured in his dignity and honour as part of his personality. The latter is the claim of the
individual to be secured in his reputation as a part of his substance because, in a world
in which credit plays so large a part one's good reputation has a definite money value.
In our law the individual interest in honour as distinct from an interest of substance in
reputation is recognised and protected by the. (lctio injuriarum. The case of Banks v.
Ayres,) furnishes an illustration of such protection. It was held that to solicit a. woman in
a private letter to immoral conduct was an injuria and actionable. Another case in which
the individual interest in honour and dignity was recognised and protected though no
interest of substance was involved is Epstein v. Epstein. The respondent employed private
detectives to follow about and spy on his wife whom he suspected of adultery. The
applicant asked for an interdict to put a stop to this shadowing and WESSELS, J. granted
the application. This case also illustrates the usefulness of an interdict as a means of
securing interests of personality. Another suitable remedy for securing such interests
which existed in the Roman Dutch law of the Netherlands but which is apparently
obsolete in South Africa is the action for honourable amends.) In my view the revival of
this action in our law might well serve a useful purpose since it is difficult to protect the
individual interest and honour adequately merely by money damages. In this respect it is
interesting to note that the German code.preserves one very useful form of the amende
honourable, namely, publication of the judgment at the cost of the wrongdoer.
Lastly, there is the individual interest in free belief and opinion. This interest has been
legally entrenched in many constitutions in Europe and America. There is of course a
social interest in free speech and belief and opinion not merely as guarantees of political
efficiency and instruments of social progress but also as furthering the moral and social
life of the individual. But this social interest often comes in conflict with another very
important social interest, namely, the interest in the security of social and political
institutions, and consequently it happens that it is often not granted that recognition and
protection which we may think it deserves. South Africa is full of examples (of which
section 29, sub- section 1 of the Native Administration Act 1927 is the latest) of failure to
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protect this interest, lest the institutions under which we live be endangered by so-called
seditious talk.
Having dealt with the individual interests of personality, the individual interests in the
domestic relationships next demand attention. Pound points out that one must consider
the individual interests of the individual parties to these relationships in the maintenance
and integrity thereof, and the securing of these interests both against the world at large
and between the parties. Domestic relationships are both personal and economic in their
nature and the individual interests therein therefore involve both the individual
personality and the individual substance. There are according to Pound four types of
interests in the domestic relations which the law is called upon to secure. These are (I)
interests of parents- demands which the individual makes arising out of parental relation;
(2) interests of children-demands which the individual makes arising out of the filial
relation; (3) interests of husbands -demands which the individual makes arising out of
the marital relation; and (4), interests of wives- demands which the individual makes
arising out of the conjugal relation. These claims are made both against the other party
to the relationship and against the world at large.
Let us deal first with the relation of parent and child. The claims of parents against the
world at large in respect of their children are enumerated by Pound under three heads:
(1) the claim of the society of their children and to their custody and control; (2) the
claim to the chastity of a daughter which is intimately connected with the honour and
mental comfort of the parent; and (3) the claim to the services of the child which is, of
course, an interest of substance. The claims of parents against their children are, firstly,
obedience and respect (an interest of personality); secondly, service for the profit of the
household (an interest of substance); and thirdly, support from an adult child in case
the parent is poor. It is evident that certain other interests must be weighed against
these individual interests of parents. There is, as Pound points out, a social interest in the
protection of dependent persons. Accordingly the claim of parents to the custody of their
children and to control over their upbringing has in modern times come to be greatly
limited in order to secure this social interest. All civilized states have statutes providing
for' the compulsory education of children and many have laws making the
detention of children in public institutions compulsory in all cases where the parents are
not fit to have control of their children.
The first and third of the parental claims against the world at large are recognised and
secured by our law, though such security in the case of the first claim, which is an
interest of personality, is not as complete as in the case of the third claim which, being a
claim of substance, is more easily secured through rules of law and judicial machinery.
The second claim is apparently not secured by our law, since the Roman 'Dutch law,
differing in this respect from the Anglo-American common law, allows an action for
seduction only at the instance of the seduced woman and not at the instance of her
parents. In regard to the first claim a recent American case, Pyle v. Waechter, is of great
interest. The plaintiff alleged that the defendant intentionally and maliciously poisoned
the mind of her son, then seventeen years old, and wholly alienated his natural love and
affection, esteem, and regard for her. It was held that the complaint stated no cause of
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action and defendants' demurrer was sustained. It is clear that the plaintiff based her
action on her interest in the society of her child, but though there was alienation of the
child's affections, there does not seem to have been 'deprivation of custody. Was the
judgment of the Court in denying relief sociologically correct? Now there is
undoubtedly a *social interest in the preservation of the affections that exist between a
child and its mother. Is there any other social interest of such weight as to preclude our
giving effect to this interest? There is, of course, the social interest in guarding against
the danger of imposture and of the abuse of legal process for purposes of blackmail, a
danger which is particularly strong in this type of case. There is further the social
interest in the emancipation of the child and in free individual life, an interest of
particular importance in this case as the child had already reached the age of seventeen.
It may be submitted that the best way of dealing with such a case as the present is to
inquire as to the motive of the defendant. If it can be shown that lie acted with an
improper motive, that-to use a technical term of our law-he was actuated by animus
injuriandi, he ought to be liable. Once the defendant's improper motive is proved the
danger of imposture largely disappears and the defendant can no longer shield himself,
as otherwise he- might, behind the social interest in free speech, belief and opinion.
Turning now to the claims of the parent against the child it is clear that the interest in
respect and obedience is hardly capable of being secured by law. The most the law can
do is to allow the parent the privilege of moderate chastisement.(6) Legal recognition of
the interest in the child's services for the profit of the household is in modern law much
restricted in view of the social interests that are secured by legislation as to child labour.
The third interest, namely, the interest of an indigent parent in support by an adult child
of means, is recognised and secured in our lawn,1) but not in the Anglo-American
common law.
We come now to consider the interests of children. As against the world at large a child,
as Pound points out, has an interest iii the relationship because of the duty of the parent
to support him during infancy or even after majority if he is unable to support himself
and the parent has sufficient means. This is an interest of substance recognised and
protected by our law, though not in the Anglo-American law. The child also has an
interest in the society and affection of the parent. Whether the law should secure this
interest depends on the considerations which I pointed out in connection with Pyle’s
case. As against the parent a child has three claims: (1) support during infancy; (2)
education, as far as the financial position of the parent allows; and (3) in the case of
indigent adult children unable to support themselves, maintenance in as far as the means
of the parent permit. All these interests are recognised and secured by our law, though
not by the Anglo-American common law.
The claims of a husband against the world at large arising out of the marital relationship
are classified by Pound under four heads. The first is his interest in the society of his
wife. The second is his interest in the affection of his wife. The third is his interest in the
chastity of his wife; and the fourth is his interest in the services of his wife in the
household. The first three are interests of personality, the fourth is an interest of
substance. In our law the first of these interests is recognised and protected either by an
action for damages or by a interdict against the third person who harbours a man's wife
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and keeps her away from him. The third interest is recognised and secured by an action
for damages against an adulterer. This action is independent of the action for divorce
because, as the case of Viriers v. Kiliann shows, it will lie even though the husband has
forgiven his wife and is therefore unable to obtain a divorce. That the hmus- band's
interest in his wife's services in the household is amply protected by our law is shown by
the cases of Union Government v. Warneke and Abbott v. Beryinam. Whether the
husband's interest in his wife's affection is protected by our law is a point on which I
have been unable to find any authority, but I should think that the actio injuriarum is
wide enough to protect it.
As against the wife the claims of the husband are, as tabulated by Pound, firstly, to her
society and affection, secondly, to her services for the benefit of the household, and
thirdly, in the case of an indigent husband to support. In our law the husband acquires
the personal guardianship of the wife and thus his claim to her society is secured. The
husband as the administrator of the community has un- fettered control of his wife's
earnings. Our law also recognises and secures the third interest, for a wife may be
compelled to maintain her husband when he is in want.
Against the world at large a wife has four claims arising out of the conjugal relationship.
Pound classifies them as follows: (1) An interest in the society of her husband; (2) An
interest in the affection of her husband; (3) An interest in the chastity and constancy of
her husband; and (4) an interest of substance in that her husband supplies her with the
necessaries of life. Whether the first two of these interests are protected by our law
seems to be doubtful. There is conflict of authority as to whether the third interest is
protected. It has been held on the one hand that a wife is not entitled to damages against
a female co-respondent and on the other hand that she is so entitled. There can be little
doubt that the latter is the better decision. Our law recognises and protects the fourth
interest by allowing the wife to pledge her husband's credit for necessaries and by giving
her an action if she suffers pecuniary loss through the wrongful death of her husband.
As against her husband the claims of a wife are, firstly, a claim to his society and
affection, and, secondly, a claim to support. The first claim is left by the law to the
protection afforded by morality and good feeling. The second is fully recognised and
protected by our law.
You will have noticed that the law does not recognise and secure all the interests in the
domestic relationships. The reason for this appears from the following words of Dean
Pound. "Three difficulties," says Pound, "are involved in the attempt to secure these
interests. In the first place the interests which have to be weighed against them are
more numerous and important than in other cases. There is not only the individual
interest of the other party to the relation, but there are the social interests in the family as
a social institution, in the protection of dependent persons, and in the rearing and
training of sound and well-bred citizens for the future. Again, serious infringements of
the individual interests in the domestic relations, such as tale bearing and intrigue, are
often too intangible to be reached effectively by legal machinery. Finally, in 'so far as
these interests are in effect interests of personality, they are so peculiarly related to the
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mental and spiritual life of the individual as to involve in the highest degree the
difficulties incidental to all legal reparation of injuries to the person."
On 24 April 1989 in the Witwatersrand Local Division of the Supreme Court a decision
was rendered that is a memorable example of sciological jurisprudence. The decision was
that of Van der Walt J in S v Moses Mayekiso & others (unreported case 115/89). After
all the media publicity it is perhaps trite to note that Mayekiso and others (the 'Alexandra
Five') were acquitted on charges of subversion or alternatively sedition (charges of
treason were dropped at the dose of the defence evidence). It is a pity that this case was
not considered to be worthy of reporting, for it establishes precedents in two important
areas. First, it shows that where a people have democratically devised mechanisms for
their own social welfare, the government should respect and recognize them instead of
branding them as subversive or seditious. Second, the case provides a clear-cut example
of judicial realism and sociological jurisprudence, which is a rare event for a South
African court.
On the surface the facts of the case were fairly straightforward. The State endeavoured to
show 'that the Alexandra Action Committee(AAC), of which all five accused were
executive members, was the vehicle through which residents of Alexandra were
mobilized and politically conscientized' as part of the so-called national liberation
struggle to bring about or promote a constitutional, social, political and economic change
in the Republic. (Typed judgment at C 239/9.)
The State endeavoured to show that, in order to achieve this end, the AAC conspired with
the Alexandra Youth Congress and other youth groups to launch rent and consumer
boycotts and campaigns against the police and town councilors. It was alleged that the
aim of the AAC was to cause disorder in the township, to impede police and local
authority services, to disrupt law and order, and to defy or subvert or assail the authority
of the State. According to the lengthy indictment, the accused, through the AAC,
attempted to seize control of Alexandra township and render it ungovernable, with the
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intent to achieve one or more of the objects set out in s 54(1) of the Internal Security Act
74 of 1982 and/or with the aim of subverting the authority of the State. (Typed judgment
at C 238/32.)
The judge observed that the AAC was a people's organization with democratically
elected leaders. He noted that in order to improve the squalid living conditions in
Alexandra, the AAC had initially approached the authorities, but to no avail. After it had
been ignored by the authorities it approached certain welfare organizations, such as the
South African Council of Churches (SACC). At one stage the SACC helped to resolve a
potentially explosive confrontation between the police and Alexandra residents
represented by the AAC. The AAC was recognized as legitimate by the people of
Alexandra. The judge candidly noted that South African blacks do not have the vote and
thus have no say in central political decision making. He recognized the AAC as a
legitimate expression of their wish to be heard and their right to have democratically
elected leaders.
The charges against the accused had been brought as the result of events that had taken
place in Alexandra during the period 1985 to June 1986 and the role the State alleged the
accused played in these events. The court took into account the deplorable living
conditions which prevailed in Alexandra, in spite of the Alexandra redevelopment master
plan scheme introduced in 1980 by the township authorities. The court recognized that
the Alexandra community was legitimately dissatisfied with this scheme and that, for
good reason, they lacked trust and faith in the authorities. The formation of the AAC
emanated from this lack of confidence in the authorities and from the feeling of
helplessness and despair suffered by the residents of Alexandra.
The AAC formed street or avenue committees in Alexandra so as, in the words of the
accused, 'to unite the people of Alexandra and to look at people's problems in order that
they may be solved'. According to the accused, the street and yard committees were a
step 'towards conscientizing and building unity among residents' (typed judgment at C
239/10), so that they could act collectively to solve their problems. The judge noted that
there was a relationship of trust between the AAC and the community based on a feeling
of confidence that the AAC was a democratic and fair organization.
The AAC formed people's courts as a mechanism for settling disputes. The formal legal
system had lost all legitimacy in the eyes of the township residents and was seen as a tool
of oppression rather "than an instrument of justice. Some of the accused took part as
officials in these people's courts, which entertained mostly domestic disputes and
problems relating to living conditions in the township. Although corporal punishment
was sometimes used by these courts, in one of the AAC executive meetings it had been
decided that corporal punishment should be discouraged and that an emphasis be placed
on mediation and moral authority. All of these facts were noted by his lordship.
People's courts in Alexandra were pounced on by the police soon after they were
introduced. Their officials were branded as political agitators whose aim was to
undermine the South African state and foment revolution. It is true that during the
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political upheavals that followed in the wake of the 1983 white referendum on the new
tricameral Parliament (that excluded blacks), gangsterism sometimes took its toll in the
guise of popular justice. For example, during the consumer-boycott period there were
reported instances of muggings in the guise of enforcing the boycott. They demonstrated
what can happen when the authorities undermine genuine popular justice-it degenerates
into lawlessness. In fact, people's courts had legitimacy in their communities. The hearing
by them of many domestic disputes discredited, in the judge's view, allegations made by
the State that they were subversive institutions. Quite the opposite-they had the effect of
holding the community together at a time when the formal legal system was unresponsive
to its needs.
Funerals involving deaths of activists have always been viewed as subversive by South
African police and authorities. In the 'Alexandra Five' case the State at one stage
submitted that a certain mass funeral in which the AAC was involved was an act of
subversion against the state. Van der Walt J noted that although a funeral is a highly
emotional occasion, it is not prima facie subversive or seditious. To establish its
subversive or seditious character, much more evidence was required than had been led by
the State. Van der Walt J, by putting a heavy burden on the State to prove the
subversiveness of a funeral, demonstrated a high degree of judicial realism. His
sociological sensitivity is also shown by his taking judicial note of the fact that the police
were viewed as having played a role in attacks upon the homes and lives of certain
'radical' elements in Alexandra. This, coupled with the apparent refusal of the police to
entertain serious and legitimate complaints lodged by residents prior to the time of
people's courts, was a major cause of the loss of legitimacy of the police in the Alexandra
community, and was recognized to be so by his lordship.
Van der WaltJ demonstrated the kind of sociological jurisprudence that is longed for by
many in South Africa. He put himself right into the boots of the people of Alexandra
township. At one stage of the trial he made an in loco inspection of the township. He
made many inquiries during the trial and again and again called for more factual detail.
He expressed interest in the attitudes and social context of the township people. He noted
in his judgment that they saw the discrimination inherent in the system of apartheid as
wrong and unacceptable and endeavoured to propagate their rights as citizens in a
democratic and fair way. He noted that they wanted to vote and participate in some way
or other in the electoral process, so that they could have responsive and democratically
elected representatives. The judge did not allow the fact that the accused adhered to
socialistic ideals to taint his reasoning with a 'total onslaught' bias. In short, he departed
from the normal South African jurisprudential approach that often makes certain
'thoughts' a crime against the state.
Most important is the fact that the judge noted as important to the case before him the
fact that black citizens of South Africa are not allowed to vote. 'For obvious reasons this
[is] a cause of resentment among the black citizens of South Africa', he said (at C
238/21). Again and again his lordship emphasized that all this (sociological) background
was important for an understanding of the social causes of the events that took place in
Alexandra during the period covered by the charges.
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The judicial realism and sociological jurisprudence displayed by Van der Walt J is a clear
departure from the usual approach taken by South African judges. The usual approach is
lucidly described in an article by Raymond Suttner entitled 'The Ideological Role of the
Judiciary in South Africa' ((1984) 13 Philosophical Papers, reprinted in John Hund (ed)
Law and Justice in South Africa (1988) 81; all citations are to the anthologized version of
the Suttner paper). Suttner notes that the way disputes are structured in South African
courts and the consequent narrowing of issues have 'ideological effects' (at 92). He says
that '[i]n directly political cases, court proceedings are merely one phase of a wider
struggle between a particular state and its opponents'(idem). In discussing the Barbara
Hogan treason trial (S v Hogan 1983 (2) SA 46 (W)), Suttner notes that '[what happens in
these [political] trials is that it is sought to criminalise people who often belong to
movements enjoying wide popular support and/or who have acted in support of beliefs
that enjoy considerable popularity' (idem). This is exactly what was the case with the
accused in the Mayekiso case. The AAC enjoyed support among the residents of
Alexandra, otherwise many residents of Alexandra would have testified against the
accused at the trial. To the surprise of no one, this did not happen. Nor was it a case of
'intimidation', as the State alleged.
Suttner says that one way of legitimizing ordinary court proceedings against 'anti-social'
elements in South Africa is 'by the abstraction of the individuals and their acts from much
of their context-primarily from those aspects that the accused consider most relevant'
(idem).This was precisely the approach taken by Van Dyk J in the trial of Barbara Hogan.
For Van DykJ, according to Suttner, 'Barbara Hogan's motivations, the social and
political circumstances against which she acted, are of little consequence' (at 94). Van der
Walt J's approach to the Mayekiso case is a direct and interesting contrast to the
positivistic approach that is normal in South African jurisprudence. It represents a
refreshing breath of change from the jurisprudence of Van Dyk J, which Suttner rightly
criticizes on jurisprudential and ideological grounds.
Van der Walt J recognized that, from the point of view of the people living in Alexandra
township, the AAC was a legitimate organization, and the South African government was
illegitimate. From the judge's sociological and historical account of the events in
Alexandra township we" can see that the 1980s in Alexandra involved a complex
interaction between repression, reform and popular justice. People dialectically
responded to the denial of basic rights by creating democratic mechanisms at grass-roots
level. They hoped to speak with one voice to the authorities of the day in order to be
heard and to better their life chances. The authorities reacted repressively to the
community's needs, so that the community lost all confidence in state-created structures
of local government. In a nutshell, this was the context of the Mayekiso case, a context
that was admirably described and taken note of in Van der Walt J's illuminating
judgment.
The 'Alexandra Five' case demonstrates that the state should take cognizance of
representative structures which people have devised for themselves. To do so would
show the government's genuine desire to create conditions for negotiating real reform in a
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post-apartheid South Africa. It is a denial of basic human rights to brand such structures
as purely subversive or seditious. It is to be hoped that this case will represent a new
wave in South African jurisprudence. It is an outstanding and rare example of judicial
realism and sociological jurisprudence. (106 S. African L.J. 595 1989)
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UNIT SIX
LEGAL REALISM
Introduction
Legal realism had its origins in the twentieth century. The term realism is used in many
ways to characterize intellectual and philosophical movements. In the art of painting,
‘realism’ refers to portraying a picture exactly as what the painter saw without idealizing
it, choosing his subject from what was the ugly and commonplace of everyday life. In
literature ‘realism’ designates an approach that attempts to describe life without
idealizing or romantic subjectivity.
Similarly, legal realism attempts to describe the law without idealizing it, to portray the
law as it is – not how it should be or how it was depicted in traditional theories that
ignored the law’s actual day-to-day operation – and to reform it. American legal realists
were concerned with portraying actual practice: the centrality of the court and the
unimportance of rules in statute books for predicting what courts do. They sought to
make law an empirical science. Scandinavian legal realists wanted to expose and
eliminate the hidden basis of the law – the metaphysical assumptions of orthodox legal
thought – and to base law on sociological and psychological facts. The difference is that
the Scandinavian realists were interested in the legal system as a whole rather than the
narrow area of interest of the courts adopted by the Americans.
The relation of legal realism to natural law theory is straight forward: Americans reject
appeals to natural law. Legal realists are not legal positivists in the classical sense of
Bentham and Austin, since they do not embrace the idea of command theory. For more
clear understanding of the two concepts please read Attachment B
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Objective
After reading this chapter students will able to:
• Understand the different concepts of law within the realist school of thoughts
• Explain the conception of law in view of the jurisprudents from the realist school.
• Observe the role and influence of courts in creation of laws
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American Realists
Oliver Wondel Holmes and John Chipman Gray are greatly considered as the two mental
fathers of the American Legal Realism. Prominent are also other writers in this class of
philosophy. In this discussion, besides the two giants, we shall in particular investigate
the philosophical approaches of Karl Llewellyn and Jerome Frank.
As with many new attitudes and schools of thought, the American brand of realism was a
reaction to an earlier school. Especially, it was against school of formalism, which
concentrated on logical and a priori reasoning, and was thus thought to be only
theoretical and not practical or pragmatic. Formalism, so the realist thought, had no
regard to the facts of life experience. Realism attempted to be both practical and
pragmatic, rejecting theoretical and analytical approaches to jurisprudential questions,
and attempting to look at what it perceived to be the reality in the question: how does law
work in practice?
At this juncture, it seems practical and relevant to raise briefly the idea of pragmatism. It
is always considered that the American legal realism found its source in the pragmatism
of William James. The pragmatism of William James, the general philosophy in the
second and third decades of the twentieth century, was decidedly similar to realism in its
approach. In the words of James:
A pragmatist turns away from the abstraction and insufficiency, from verbal
solutions, from bad a priori reasons, from fixed principles, closed systems, and
pretended absolute and origins. He turns towards concreteness and adequacy,
towards facts, towards actions and towards power. That means the empiricist
temper regnant and rationalist temper sincerely given up. It means the open air
and the possibilities of nature, as against dogma, artificiality, and the pretence of
finality in truth.
In applying the doctrine to law, James anticipated the realist skepticism of legal rules as
controlling factors in judicial decisions. He said:
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Given previous law and a novel case the judge will twist them into fresh law….All
the while, however, we pretend that the eternal is unrolling, that the one previous
justice, grammar or truth are simply fulgurating and not being made. But imagine
a youth in the courtroom trying cases with his abstract notion of “the” law (or the
censor of speech with his “mother-tongue,” a professor with his Truth), and what
progress do they make? Truth , land and language fairly boil away from them at
the least touch of novel fact…. Far from being antecedent principles that animate
the process, law, language, truth are but abstract names for results.
Pragmatism has, thus, stimulated a new approach to law, that “of looking towards last
things, fruits, consequences or results. Generally speaking, how the rule of law works, not
what they are on paper, is the theme of pragmatic approach to legal problems.
IMPORTANT
It was the remark of Oliver Wendell Holmes, a US Supreme Court Judge. His predictive
view of the law has greatest influence on American legal realism. Concerning his
contribution, Patterson has (in his book, Jurisprudence, Men and Idea of Law) remarked
that the aggregation of ideas which came in time to be known as American Legal Realism
contained many which were either genuinely derived from Holmes or were inspired by
his ripped-out aphorism. For legal realism the two most influential Holmes’ ideas were
his prediction concept of law and his view that policies and prejudices have more to do
with judicial decisions than the logical application of rules.
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attacked the view that the Common Law was an entirely valid manifestation of higher
reason hovering over the troubled waters of the present, which could be concretized for
the individual case by an act of perception on the part of an intellectually detached judge
operating on logical and deductive principles:
The actual life of the law has not been logic: it has been experience. The felt
necessities of the times, the prevalent moral and political theories, institutions of
public policy, avowed or unconscious, even the prejudices which judges share
with their fellow men, have had a good deal more to do than the syllogism in
determining the rules by which men should be governed.
In his celebrated essay, The Path of the Law, he provided his most known realist concept
of law: The prophesies of what the court will do in fact, and nothing more pretentious,
are what I mean by the law. Let’s see more from this essay.
Take the fundamental question, what constitutes the law? You will find some text
writers telling you that it is ….a system of reason, that it is deduction from
principles of ethics or admitted axioms or what not, which may or may not
coincide with the decisions. But if we take the view of our friend the bad man we
shall find that he does not care two straws for the axioms or deductions, but that
he does want to know what the Massachusetts or English court are likely to do in
fact. I am much of his mind. The prophesies of what the court will do in fact, and
nothing more pretentious, are what I mean by the law.
In speaking of the ‘bad man’ it is clear that Holmes was intending to include any person
who is having to contemplate legal proceedings, whether (as a bad man) as an accused in
criminal proceedings or a litigant, whether plaintiff or defendant, in a civil action. When
the bad man hires a lawyer, all he wants is to know the practical consequences of doing a
certain act (which might be considered illegal). The bad man is pragmatic in that he
wants to know the consequences not because he is a moralist, but because he knows there
is what one may call the law, a force he cannot challenge as applied by courts.
The whole of Holmes’ idea of bad man prediction can be better understood by reading
attachment B. Although the dialogues are perfectly fictitious, the case was what really
happened.
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B. On morality
Legal positivists, such as Austin argued that without the distinction between law and
morality, legal thinking became confused. Holmes agreed with the legal positivists on
this point. Indeed, it was Holmes’s belief that if all words with moral connotation were
eliminated from the law, the law would gain in precision.
For my own part, I often doubt whether it would not be a gain if every word of moral
significance could be banished from the law altogether, and other words adopted
which should convey legal ideas uncolored by anything outside the law. We should
lose the fossil records of a good deal of history and majesty got from ethical
associations, but by ridding ourselves of unnecessary confusion we should gain very
much in the clearness of thought.
C. Criticism
The limitation of this notion that the essence of law consists of predictions have been
well explored. It has been pointed out for, example, that:
i. This approach disregards the rules and laws that establish the
judiciary itself.
ii. It also left out multitude rules particularly in the field of public
administrative law that are properly described as law but which do
not lie in the field of litigation and therefore are not a matter of
prediction.
Another strand in American realism, linked with the first but distinct from it, is that
which emphasizes the significance of the role of the courts in any consideration of the
nature of law. It is the role of the judge that is central to a proper understanding.
This view was carried to its limit by J. C. Gray, who regarded all law as judge-made law.
Statutes (legislations made by parliament) are not laws by virtue of their enactment. They
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only become law when applied by a decision of the courts. Only then does a legislative
enactment spring to life and acquire actual force.
In his book, The Nature and Source of the Law, Gray defines law as follows:
The law of the state or of any organized body of men is composed of the rules
which the courts, that is, the judicial organs of that body, lay down for the
determination of legal rights and duties.
Legislation is therefore no more than a source of law. According to his view, it is not a
law until it had been interpreted by the courts, for “the courts put life into the dead words
of the statutes.” Hence by relegating statutory legislation from the center of the law and
putting it as one form of source of the law, he puts the judge in the center, instead.
Gray distinguishes ‘the law’ from ‘a law’. ‘A law’ ordinarily means a statute passed by
the legislature of a state. ‘The law’ is the whole system of rules applied by the courts.
Thus, Gray considered ‘a law’, that is, a statute passed by the legislature (as well as
precedents, custom, and morality) as source of the law not the law itself. Thus, statute,
precedent, custom, and morality are on Gray’s view, the basis for the rules that the courts
lay down for making their decision. This means all of them are not binding. The judge’s
choice is what matters.
Accordingly, one may conclude that the Austinian sovereign lies in the person of the
judge. In his book he cited Bishop Hoadley’s words which say: “Nay, whoever hath an
absolute authority to interpret any written or spoken laws, it is He who is truly the Law
Giver to all intents and purposes, and not the person who first wrote and spoke them.”
Carrying his definition to its full logical extent, Gray concluded, “The law of a great
nation means the opinions of half-a dozen old gentlemen,” for “if those half-a-dozen old
gentlemen form the highest judicial tribunal of a country, then no rule or principle which
they refuse to follow is Law in the country.”
Gray offers two lines of evidence in support of this argument. First, he points to the
common circumstances where a situation before the court is entirely novel. In the absence
of statutes, precedents, or custom on the issue, there is absolutely no doubt but that the
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court will still come to a conclusion and state ‘the law’ governing the matter. Second,
Gray points to the mutability of law itself through judicial decision making. Both through
review of trial court decisions at the appellate level, and through appellate
reconsideration of its own prior decisions, the ‘law’ becomes very much a product of
judicial function.
B. On analytical Jurisprudence
The great gain in its fundamental conceptions which jurisprudence made during
the last century was the recognition of the truth that the law of a state or other
organized body is not an ideal, but something which actually exists. It is not that
which is in accordance with religion, or nature, or morality; it is not that which it
ought to be. But that which it is.
5. Criticism
As discussed above, Gray suggests that until a statute had been enforced by a court, it
was not a rule at all, but only a source of law. Likewise, the power of an appellate court
to overrule its precedents, and the power of any court to interpret precedents, led Gray to
a similar conclusion that precedents are not law but merely sources of law. Yet he defines
law as “the rules that the courts…..lay down for the determination of legal rights and
duties.” Thus he was led to the curious position that the rules laid down by a court in
deciding a case are “the law” for the case but are only sources of the law for the “next
case.”
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law of the highest court of the jurisdiction in which the “next” case is to be decided, is
misleading.
A third criticism provided by Michael Doherty is that Gray’s definition of the law denies
the facilitative function of certain statutes, such as, for example, the Companies Act (any
law that incorporates a company). One does not go to a court in order to incorporate a
company, and yet the procedures and requirements for doing that are prescribed in
statute.
This doing of something about disputes, this doing of it reasonably, is the business
of law. And the people who have the doing in charge, whether they be judges or
sheriffs or clerks or jailors or lawyers, are officials of the law. What these
officials do about disputes is, to my mind, the law.
Holmes and gray gave the power of making law to the judges of higher courts, but
Llewellyn widens it to all officers of the law. In fact, within the decade, Llewellyn
subsequently disagreed with himself, and suggested that no definition of law has really
proved adequate to the task. Law for Llewellyn was a means for the achievement of
social ends and for this reason it should not be backward looking for its development but
should be forward looking in terms of moulding the law to fit the current and future needs
of society. Furthermore, realists should be concerned with the effects of law on society
and he insisted that law should be evaluated principally in terms of its effects.
B. Rule Skepticism
Llewellyn is described as “rule skeptic” in that he distrusts rules as laws. Jerome Frank
(another American jurist) called this aspect of realism as ‘rule skepticism’ – skepticism as
to whether rules, if they exist, in practice play the part traditionally ascribed to them. For
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Llewellyn, legal rules do not describe what the courts are purporting to do nor do they
describe how individuals concerned with the law behave. Legal rules as found in books
and emphasized in judicial decisions do not accord with reality. Rules, as described in
books and judicial decisions, have essentially taken on a life of their own, and as such
bear little resemblance to the actuality of legal process. Legal rules are not the ‘heavily
operative factors’ in producing the decisions of courts although they appear to be on the
surface. The realist should be concerned with discovering those factors that really
influence judges, and judges in return should be more open about using them.
C. Functions of Law
The requirement that law must be evaluated in terms of its consequences led Llewellyn to
developing a sophisticated analysis of the purpose of law in his later works. In one of his
works, My Philosophy of Law, Llewellyn described the basic functions of law as ‘law-
jobs.’ He lists them in five groups as follows:
1. The disposition of trouble cases (wrong, grievance, dispute), which he likened to
garage repair work. The continuous effect was to be the remarking of the order
of society.
2. The preventive channeling of conduct and expectations so as to avoid trouble,
and together with it, the effective reorientation of conduct and expectations in a
similar fashion. This does not mean merely, for instance, new legislation; it is
instead, what new legislation is about, and is for.
3. The allocation of authority and the arrangement of procedures which mark action
as being authoritative; which includes all of any constitution, and much more.
4. The net organization of society as a whole so as to provide integration, direction
and incentive.
5. Juristic method as used in law and the settlement of disputes.
The first three jobs ensure society’s survival and continuation, whilst the latter two
increase efficiency and expectations. One may disagree with Llewellyn’s list of the jobs
of the law but they do provide a more holistic approach to law making and judicial
activity than others. You can also compare the list with Fuller’ inner morality of laws.
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D. Characters of Realism
By analyzing the realist movement in America, Llewellyn came up with a list of
characteristics of the American legal realism. Hence, the realist concept of law can be
better explained in the following ways:
1. The conception of law in flux, of moving law, and of judicial creation of law.
2. The conception of law as a means to social ends not as an end in itself; so that any
part needs constantly to be examined for its purpose, and for its effect, and to be
judged in the light of both and of their relation to each other.
3. The conception of society in flux, and in flux typically faster than the law, so that
the probability is always given that any portion of law needs re-examination to
determine how far it fits the society it purports to serve.
4. The temporary divorce of Is and Ought for purpose of study. By this Llewellyn
means that whereas appeal must always be made to value judgments in order to
determine objectives for inquiry itself into what Is, the observation, the
description, and the establishment of relations between the things described are to
remain as largely as possible uncontaminated by what the observer wishes might
be or thinks ought (ethically) to be.
5. Distrust of traditional rules and concepts insofar as they purport to describe what
either courts or people are actually doing. Here, the emphasis is upon rules as
‘generalized predictions of what courts will do.’
6. Distrust of the theory that traditional prescriptive rule-formulations are the heavily
operative factor in producing court decisions. This involves the tentative adoption
of the theory of rationalization for the study of options.
7. The belief in the worthwhile-ness of grouping cases into narrower categories than
has been the practice in the past.
8. An insistence on evaluation of any part of the law in terms of its effect, and an
insistence on the worthwhile-ness of attempting to ascertain these effects.
9. Insistence on sustained and pragmatic attack on the problems of law along any of
these lines.
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All of these did not being to Llewellyn, but to all of the preceding realists we discussed.
For example, Gray’s theories are readily evident under numbers 1 and 6 above; Holmes’
influence is apparent in all nine, and in particular in 2 and 8; Pound’s ideas are
particularly obvious in 1,2,3,5,6,and 8; James’ influence is manifested in 2 and 8.
A. On Rule skepticism
Judge Jerome Frank categorizes the whole realist movement into “rule skepticism” and
“fact skepticism.” As shown above, Llewellyn and others grouped under the former class,
and Frank himself in the latter. According to rule skepticism, those formal rules found in
judicial decisions and in books, were unreliable as guides in the prediction of decisions.
The fact that such a multiplicity of rules exists and that some can lead to conflicting
results may mean that, in practice, in reaching a decision a judge does not explore the
whole corpus of the relevant law, the statutes and the earlier cases, and from these by a
process of distillation find the principle that guides him to the correct decision. He may
pretend to do this, and his judgment may be written in a way that suggests that he has
done this. But it may be that what has happened is that the judge has thought about the
matter, decided who he thinks has the best case, and then gone to his law books to work
out the chain of reasoning that will lead to his predetermined conclusion.
Dear reader, Can you see to what extent the realists go? Frank is saying that he has a
doubt if the judge can do all the research before decision. In the common law a judge has
to read a huge amount of case books and maybe also statutes. Jerome Frank, he himself
being one of the federal judges, is saying that judges in reality do not go all the way.
They decide first based on the arguments and evidences provided by both parties, and
then search for statute or case to support his reasoning.
Thus the main thrust of Frank’s attack was directed against the idea that certainty could
be achieved through legal rules. This, in his view, was absurd. If it were so, he argued,
why would anyone bother to litigate? To strength his argument he gave an example from
the US Supreme Court cases. In 1917 the court ruled the validity of a certain statute. But
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in 1923, by majority vote, the court ruled that the statute was invalid. In between the two
years judges were changed. He said that the answer to the validity of the statute turned,
not on the certainty of the applicable rule, but on the personnel of the court. He said that
this is natural. We want the law to be certain. But this cannot happen. It is only our deep
need for security and safety, like children who place their trust in the wisdom of their
fathers that we want to rely on the law. We should, he urged, grow up.
B. On Fact Skepticism
But Frank expounded a theory more extreme than the above approach. Judge Frank has
persuasively argued that the greatest uncertainties of the judicial process are not in the
law-finding but in the fact finding part; or at least, primarily in the witness-jury part. He
points out that the assumption that a fat-trial is intended to bring out “the truth” is
contradicted by the “fight” theory, that the best way to get the truth out is to have two
skilful advocates hammering away at each other’s witnesses. The contradiction comes
when in their patrician zeal the advocates distort or cover up the truth.
Hence, the chief reason why legal rules do not more adequately perform the principal
tasks they are supposed to do –guide and predict the decisions of trial courts-is, he
maintains, because of the uncertainty as to what facts the trier of fact (especially the jury)
will find as the ones to which the legal rule or principle is to be applied. A man in
possession of real property has a right to use “reasonable” force in repelling willful
intruders, but how can he tell, when confronted with an intruder, what a jury will
subsequently find to be “reasonable” force? Thus, one of the supposedly securest of legal
rights in American law, a basic part of the ownership of real property, is rendered
insecure by the uncertainty as to what the trier of fact will find.
But why do the others fail to see that? Because the rule skeptics see only the practice of
the higher courts, the appellate and supreme courts. Frank underlines that in the lower
courts prediction of the outcome litigation was not possible. The major cause of
uncertainty is not the legal rule, but the uncertainty of the fact finding process. Much
depends on witness, who can be mistaken as to their recollections; and on judges and
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juries, who bring their own beliefs, prejudices and so on, into their decisions about
witness, party etc. It is not unusual for the jury to give a decision (guilty or not-guilty)
which is not expected and sometimes surprising.
Further, the uncertainty can also be found in the process by which a judge determines a
particular fact to be a material fact. This means whenever the judge decides a case he
weighs facts and chooses the material which as very relevant for his decision. Hence, the
argument is that different judges may come to different outcomes of same case because
of application of different facts.
Summary
The realist legal movement which originated and dominated in the United States focuses
on the role of the court as opposed to the positivist school which emphasizes the
sovereign. The role f the judge differs from jurist to jurist as discussed above. But
generally all realists opposed any formalism approach to law. For realists the law is
unpredicted and highly biased by the thinking of the judge.
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PART TWO
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UNIT SEVEN
The main thrust of their attack is against liberal legal theories, in which they group
together as one target most of the other theories identified in this material, although their
principal targets are the theories of positivism presented by Kelsen and Hart, in addition
to the rights-based theories such as those put forward by Dworkin, Rawls and Finnis. The
analysis below will show that the critical legal scholars characterize liberal legal thought
as an ideology whose surface character hides its true nature. Furthermore, for the critical
legal scholars, liberal legal theory claims to be a politically neutral and objective way to
resolve conflicts. The critical legal scholars deny this and state that liberal legal thought
is a conflict-ridden structure beneath its purportedly objective exterior, an exterior which
also conceals the political judgments and power structures within the law.
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The critical legal scholars go far beyond American realism, although they are often seen
as the inheritors of the sceptical approach. While the realists rejected formalism they still
saw legal reasoning as distinct. Indeed, the realists were committed to liberalism. They
did not directly attempt to undermine the liberal ideal of the rule of law, and in many
ways, particularly in the later writings of Llewellyn, they were trying to improve the legal
system by bringing it more in line with modern social conditions. Indeed, it could be said
that the urging of judges and jurists to reject formalism in favour of a realistic approach
to jurisprudence was an attempt in many ways to bring law more into line with the power
structures and commercial environment of the day. The critical scholars share, and
indeed take further a profound scepticism of law in books, but they reject any attempt,
whether realist or formalist, to present a value-free model of the law.
In many respects, it will be seen that the major themes of the critical legal studies
movement are similar to those ideas developed by the Marxists, particularly modern
Marxist writers such as Gramsci and Collins. Critical legal scholars appear to reject the
theory of instrumentalism and the argument that law is simply a part of the
superstructure of society. Indeed, they see the operations of law as being essential for the
continuation of liberal society. Kennedy comments:
Nevertheless, this does not completely distinguish the critical legal scholars from the
modern-day Marxists whose sophisticated analysis in terms of competing ideologies often
appears a long way from the simple instrumentalist view of Marxism. Perhaps the more
telling distinction is that critical legal studies form part of the post-structuralist (post-
modernist) phenomenon which is pervading many areas of thought, not just simply legal
philosophy, whereas Marxism is essentially structuralist in its content. Whether a simple
instrumentalist view is taken or whether a more sophisticated link is perceived between
base and superstructure as is found in modern versions, Marxism is still a structured
theory as Thomson points out:
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Politically inspired largely by the perceived failure of Marxist socialism to deliver its
promise of a society that overcomes exploitation, the last two decades have witnessed a
growing doubt about the Marxist project and a growing feeling that it is infected with
the same weakness as the liberal capitalist system it opposes, and of which, as the
counter-culture, it is , arguably a part. That weakness is seen by many as the
continuing faith, shared with its liberal protagonist, in the capacity of reason to realise
progress. Thus many argue that domination and exploitation are not the monopoly of
any one theory, but are characteristic of all theories, especially those, such as Marxism,
which make claims to truth on a grand scale.
The overall aim of critical theory is to destroy the notion that there is one single 'truth',
and that by disclosing the all-pervasive power structures and hierarchies in the law and
legal system, a multitude of other possibilities will be revealed, all equally valid. Herein
lies the problem for the critical legal scholars, for while they may be able to deconstruct
the 'truth' of liberal legalism, they cannot, within the terms of their own methodology, put
forward the alternative, only an alterative. One such alternative, indeed the only complete
one, is offered by Unger's vision of a super-liberal society which will be discussed below.
To start with, however, a review of the fundamental tenets of the critical legal scholars'
attack on the liberal legal tradition will be undertaken.
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Furthermore, critical legal studies is an attack on Western liberal concepts of basic
civil and political rights which purportedly guarantee, in a legal sense, the individual's
freedom of speech, assembly, religion, and in a political sense liberal democracies are
based on the concept of the freedom of the individual. These rights and freedoms are
portrayed in the Western tradition as being the only true way to self-realisation and
freedom of the individual. The critical legal scholars' aim is to show that these rights
and freedoms, although put forward as essential to an individual's fulfilment, actually
serve the political and economic requirements of liberalism. For instance, the concept
of freedom of contract, though not a civil and political right in the recognised sense,
is not a liberating concept but one that ties individuals to the market-place and serves
the basic aims of capitalism. Contract law along with all other bodies of law in a
liberal society serves political ends. Indeed, for the critical scholars they are simply
politics in disguise. Why then do people accept the liberal traditions of the law?
People do not hold to theories of the kinds I have been criticising [liberal legal
theories] simply because they serve conservative ends. At least some people believe
in them because they think they're true, even though it seems to them too bad that
they are true. . . . For a lot of people, legitimating theories, theories that show the
rationality, necessity, and (often) efficiency of things as they are, serve as a kind of
defence mechanism. These theories are a way of denying, of avoiding, of closing
one's eyes to the horribleness of things as they are. (D. Kennedy, 'Cost-reduction
theory as legitimation' (1981) 90 Yale LJ 1275 at p. 1283.)
More will be said on this point as the specific themes of the critical legal studies
movement are analysed. However, at this point it is worth noting the similarities
between Kennedy's idea that people accept liberal philosophy because they think it's
true, and the Marxist idea of false consciousness when the victims of capitalism
embrace the ideology that is responsible for their situation. To put it in its wider
context, the Western media, politicians and the Establishment in general consistently
put forward as a statement of the truth that Western liberal democracy is the only
natural form of society and that the freedom of the market-place is as fundamental to
society as the political freedoms found in the West. This ideology has been
reinforced by the defeat of communism with the West's victory in the Cold War. It is
inevitable that many individuals in Western societies will believe this to be true and,
given the routine of their daily lives, will not be susceptible to fundamental change or
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be able to perceive the fact that they are being exploited let alone be able to accept an
alternative approach.
It is informative to look now at the specific criticisms that the critical legal
studies movement has of liberal legalism.
This prong of the critical legal scholars' attack is derived from the realists' disbelief that
formal rules provide an answer to a dispute. However, whereas the realists concentrated
their critique of formalism on this aspect and were particularly concerned to try to find
the real rules operated by the judge and jury, the critical legal scholars seem to take this
element as read. They add little to the realist critique in this area apart from a few
generalities. Indeed, such is the lack of detail in this area that the following criticism of
the critical scholars' approach to formalism appears justified. It appears from their attack
that formalism is:
. . . the CLS [critical legal studies] caricature of the notion that law is a deductive and
autonomous science that is self-contained in the sense that particular decisions follow
from the application of legal principles, precedents, and rules of procedure without
regard to values, social goals, or political or economic context. (L. Schwartz, 'With gun
and camera through darkest CLS-land' (1984) 36 Stanf L Rev 413 at p. 431.)
As the remainder of this book reveals, traditional and modern mainstream legal theory
does not simply put forward a simplistic scientific approach to the law. Theorists such as
Hart, Dworkin and Finnis all recognised that law is a much more complex machine. Hart
and Dworkin recognise the fact that policy in the form of social values and goals plays a
role in the legal system, though they differed over whether or not the judge should be
instrumental in its application. Finnis's central thesis is more concerned with the issue of
the role of morality in the definition and application of law, and indeed both Hart and
Dworkin also attempt to deal with the issue of morality. It appears that the critical legal
scholars are too quick to condemn mainstream theory by lumping the diversity of views
together as formalism.
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Indeed, formalism in its strict black-letter sense is not to be found in legal theory, only in
some law teaching and academic writing and in legal practice. It seems that the critical
scholars' agenda stretches both to theory and practice, with the aim of enlightening
practicing lawyers as to the 'wider implications and consequences of certain courses of
action, and in particular [to] reveal that unless legal actions are seen in the context of
larger political action, they may well be counter-productive, at least in the long term' (A.
Thomson, 'Critical approaches to law - who needs legal theory?', in I. Grigg-Spall and P.
Ireland, The Critical Lawyers' Handbook, (Loidon: Pluto Press, 1992), p. 8).
However, the lack of a detailed critique of formalism may be due to the fact that the
thrust of the critical lawyers' attack is on the wider issue of whether there is in fact a
distinct mode of legal reasoning. If they successfully demonstrate that there is no separate
mode of legal reasoning at all then it is unnecessary for them to have to deal directly with
formal legal reasoning as such. Roberto Unger, one of the leading exponents of critical
legal studies, indicates that this is the real point of the movement's critique of formalism.
By formalism I do not mean what the term is usually taken to describe: belief in the
availability of a deductive or quasi-deductive method capable of giving determinate
solutions to particular problems of legal choice. What I mean by formalism in this
context is a commitment to, and therefore also a belief in the possibility of, a method of
legal justification that can clearly be contrasted to open-ended disputes about the basic
terms of social life, disputes that people call ideological, philosophical, or visionary. (R.
Unger, 'The critical legal studies movement' (1983) 96 Harv L Rev 563 at p. 564.)
It can be seen from this how wide and potentially destructive to established legal traditions
the critical legal studies movement is. In effect it is a criticism of the positivists' idea,
exemplified perhaps by Kelsen's pure .theory that it is possible to separate law from other
areas and that legal reasoning and exposition are essentially apolitical. From this it is
clear that the aim of the movement's attack on formalism is to 'demonstrate that a
doctrinal practice that puts its hope in the contrast of legal reasoning to ideology,
philosophy, and political prophecy ends up as a collection of makeshift apologies' (R.
Unger, 'The critical legal studies movement' (1983) 96 Harv. L Rev 563 at p. 573). It is to
this attack that the analysis now turns.
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7.1.4 Critique of legal reasoning
The rejection of legal reasoning has already been outlined above, and it was seen that the
problem for the critical legal scholars was that while they reject all the theories and
practices which are dependent on the autonomy of law and legal reasoning, they do not
subscribe to the equally structuralist approach of the Marxists, who, while denying the
existence of legal reasoning, tend to adopt a deterministic position which presents law as
simply a reflection of economic forces. The critical scholars address the problem by
concentrating, as the American realists did, on the existence of external factors that
operate on the judge. However, whereas the realists did recognise that legal reasoning and
rules played a part, albeit a minor one, in the judge's decision, the critical legal scholars
are of the opinion that these external factors are the sole operative factor in the
judgment. The explanation is not put in Marxian terms of the laws simply reflecting
the economic relations within society but instead is expressed in terms of judicial values
and choices of a political nature (Hunt calls this the problem of 'relative autonomy':
A. Hunt, 'The theory of critical legal studies' (1986) 6 Oxford J Legal Stud 1 at pp. 28-
9).
A problem with the critical legal studies approach to legal reasoning is that, like its
critique of formalism, it appears to lack any detail or precision. The following is an
analysis of Kairys's examination of legal reasoning (D. Kairys, 'Legal reasoning', in D.
Kairys (ed.), The Politics of Law. A Progressive Critique New York: Pantheon Books,
1982), pp. 11-17). Kairys concentrates on 'one of the basic elements or mechanisms of
legal reasoning, stare decisis', the notion that judges are bound by precedent, an
obligation which, according to the traditional approach, leads to the judge acting on the
legal, not the political, plane. Kairys then reiterates the realists' view that:
. . . anyone familiar with the legal system knows that some precedents are
followed and some are not. . . . The important questions, largely ignored by
judges, law teachers, and commentators, are: How do courts decide which
precedents to follow? How do they determine the significance of ambiguous
precedents? Do precedents really matter at all? Why do lawyers spend so much
time talking about them?
So far Kairys's analysis does not differ from any of the early realists and indeed, if
anything, seems more simplistic. He then provides a thumbnail sketch of a handful of
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American cases on freedom of speech which at the level of abstraction presented do
appear contradictory. He then concludes his case analysis by saying:
Unstated and lost in the mire of contradictory precedents and justifications was the
central point that none of these cases was or could be decided without ultimate
reference to values and choices of a political nature. The various justifications and
precedents emphasised in the opinions serve to mask these little-discussed but
unavoidable social and political judgments. In short, these cases demonstrate a central
deception of traditional jurisprudence: the majority claims for its social and political
judgment not only the status of law . . . but also that its judgment is the product of
distinctly legal reasoning, of a neutral, objective application of legal expertise. This
latter claim, essential to the legitimacy and mystique of the courts, is false.
There is little attempt to assess these external factors accurately, except that they are ‘a
composite of social, political, institutional, experiential, and personal factors’. So far
there is no difference between Kairys's critique and the realists' approach, except perhaps
for a greater attempt to ascertain the exact nature of the external factors that lead to
judicial decisions on the part of the realists. For the critical lawyers, however, there is no
need for this because the answer is obvious and in no need of testing. Judges share social
and political assumptions, in other words they share an ideology which, because of their
background, leads them to make consistent decisions that reinforce the liberal order in
which they operate and depend on for their livelihoods. This then distinguishes the realist
from the critical lawyer.
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Kelman proceeds to identify the central contradictions in liberal thought that have been
identified by the critical lawyers. First Kelman identifies:
There are some aspects of this approach which hark back to Jerome Frank's idea that
justice should be done in each case because there is insufficient certainty and objectivity
in the legal process on which to build a sustainable doctrine of precedent. However,
Kennedy goes further than this. The fundamental contradiction between individualism
and altruism is a problem not only for a judge but is symptomatic of society in general.
'The fundamental contradiction - that relations with others are both necessary to and
incompatible with our freedom . . . is not only an aspect but the very essence of the
problem' (D. Kennedy, 'The structure of Blackstone's Commentaries' (1979) 28 Buffalo
L Rev 205 at p. 213). In the law this fundamental contradiction can be seen in the
competing and contrasting legal terminology found present, for example, in the debate
between subjectivity and objectivity in such diverse areas as criminal law and international
law (see further M. Tushnet, 'Legal scholarship: its causes and cures' (1981) 90 Yale LJ
1205). More specifically in the law of contract, for example, there is a clear dichotomy
between those concepts which favour individualism, for example, freedom of contract
which may result in a defenceless individual being taken advantage of by a more
powerful individual or company, and those concepts which favour altruism, such as
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duress and undue influence. Within the capitalist legal order with its liberal philosophy,
contract law is dominated by the former.
The second contradiction Kelman identifies in the critical lawyers' critique of liberalism
is:
The second contradiction is pointed at one of the central tenants of positivism - the
separation of law from value judgments. Nevertheless, as with the first contradiction
between individualism and altruism, this aspect goes further than simply a critique of
writers such as Kelsen. The main thrust is that both everyday culture and the liberal
theory that supports and legitimates it downgrade values and beliefs to the extent that
they are simply seen as matters of taste, peculiar to the individual, whereas reasoned
analysis of facts and laws yields universal maxims which can guide any individual's
behavior.
The aim of the critical scholars is to show that these contradictions are to be found in all
legal concepts and rules, even in the so-called clear cases where the contradiction has
simply been successfully repressed over a period of time. The assumption behind this is
that within each contradiction one set of values is paramount in liberal legal theory,
namely individualism over altruism and objectivism over subjectivism.
These are the various techniques the critical lawyers use to reveal the underlying
contradictions in the law and the deep-rooted hierarchies of power that are also hidden
beneath the neutral exterior of the law. The political motivations behind these techniques
must be understood for they too tend to be obscured in the dense, often
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incomprehensible, language of the critical lawyer. These motivations are made clear in
the following extract:
There is little systematic work on law and power despite the fact that a defining feature
of law is that it operates to facilitate exploitation and discrimination. . . . We therefore
need to explain how this concept of 'law' is used to justify the political order of modern
society. . . . The pervasiveness of law in modern society means that law must be
challenged from within by means of what we call legal insurgency. It is not enough to
be critical of law and its underlying political structures; we need to move beyond mere
criticism to critique and thereby expose the contradictions underpinning the principles,
policies and doctrines of bourgeois law. The material effects of law and the ideological
bases upon which it is manufactured must be analysed and deconstructed in order to
comprehend the power of modern legal discourse as a dominant intellectual paradigm.
(S. Adelman and K. Foster 'Critical legal theory: the power of law', in I. Grigg-Spall
and E Ireland (eds), The Critical Lawyers' Handbook (London: Pluto Press, 1992), p.
39.)
Deconstruction of law and legal language takes three main forms. 'Trashing' is essentially
aimed at revealing the illegitimate hierarchies (power structures) that exist within the law
and society in general. The task of the critical lawyers is to reveal those hierarchies and
undermine them. The hierarchy of power is not the simple one envisaged by Marxists,
who see it in terms of classes, but is much more complex and found at every level,
including universities where there is a power relationship between lecturer and student
(see A. Freeman, 'Truth and mystification in legal scholarship' (1981) 90 Yale LJ 1229).
141
see as one of the most important functions of law in a liberal society, namely the
legitimation of the socio-economic system of that society. To delegitimate law the
scholars attempt to strip away the veneer of legitimacy to reveal the ideological
underpinnings of the legal system. To many scholars the legitimacy conferred on the
social system by the law is vitally important to the continuance of that system with all
its unfairness and exploitation:
The law's perceived legitimacy confers a broader legitimacy on a social system and
ideology that . . . are most fairly characterised by domination by a very small, mainly
corporatised elite. This perceived legitimacy of the law is primarily based on notions of
technical expertise and objectivity and the idealised model of the legal process. . . . But it
is also greatly enhanced by the reality that the law is, on some occasions just and
sometimes serves to restrain the exercise of power. (D. Kairys, 'Introduction', in D.
Kairys, (ed.), The Politics of Law. A Progressive Critique, rev. ed. (New York:
Pantheon Books, 1990), p. 7.),
Generally speaking the law serves to mask exploitation by using the imagery of fairness,
equality and justice. The summary of the critical approach to contract law given below
(see 2.1) will illustrate this.
Finally an aspect of the deconstruction process which is firmly linked to trashing and
delegitimation is 'dereification'. For critical scholars like Gabel, the law is characterised
by reification, which involves a gradual process whereby abstractions, originally tied to
concrete situations, are then themselves used, and operate, instead of the concrete
situations. Simply put, the abstraction or concept takes on the form of a thing. This
process can be seen in the law, which over the centuries of its development gradually
becomes divorced from the actual human relations it is attempting to regulate. The
process is not obvious but is clouded in legal mystification so that people both within the
law, and outside the law but subject to it, mistake the abstraction for the concrete.
Concepts like mortgages, consideration, trusts, wills, take on a life of their own and
become totally divorced from their original conception. In so doing the purpose behind
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the concept becomes disguised. In the case of the legal terms listed, the purpose behind
these was the facilitation of monetary exchange in a society built on the control and
movement of capital. 'Legal reification is more than just distortion: it is also a form of
coercion in the guise of passive acceptance of the existing world within the framework of
capitalism'. Dereification is simply the recognition and exposure of such fallacies, to
reveal the law as it really is.
. . . law is not simply an armed receptacle for values and priorities determined
elsewhere; it is part of a complex social totality in which it constitutes as well as is
constituted, shapes as well as is shaped. (D. Kairys, 'Introduction', in D. Kairys (ed.),
The Politics of Law. A Progressive Critique, rev. ed. (New York: Pantheon Books,
1990), p. 6.)
The idea that law plays an important role in shaping society is part of the wider post-
modernist perspective that ideas, and not the economic base, constitute (form or make up)
society. It follows from this that if there is to be some sort of order in society, there must
be a convergence of ideas including ideas and beliefs about law, in other words a 'shared
world-view'. The critical legal scholars' critique is therefore directed at 'the analysis of
world-views embedded in modern legal consciousness'. The aim is to attack the shared
world-view embedded in legal consciousness, to reveal its link to domination in capitalist
legal societies, and to change that consciousness. This is not an easy task because the
constitutive power of the dominant shared world-view in society is grounded in that
world-view's claim to be the truth, and since 'every world-view is hostage to its claim to
be true, its constitutive force can be undermined [only] if this claim can be refuted'. The
shared world-view that the liberal order is the only true and natural system can be refuted
if it is shown that there is any number of alternative ways which would not result in
exploitation and injustice. One suggestion of an alternative way is contained in the
writings of Roberto Unger reviewed below. First, however, a more specific example of
CLS work will be examined.
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7.2. Critical Legal Studies and Feminist Legal Theory
Feminism and critical legal studies are, of course, two entirely different creatures.
Feminism is only partially and peripherally concerned with academic theorising. It is
motivated by the dissatisfactions of a wide spectrum of ... women and by the everyday
experience of such women. ('Dworkin; Which Dworkin? Taking Feminism Seriously' in
P Fitzpatrick and A. Hunt, eds., Critical Legal Studies (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1987),
p. 47.)
In this context, therefore, critical legal studies contribute a useful method rather than a
defining context. The method is, however, important as a means of demonstrating the
explicit and implicit male orientation of law and legal administration and the resulting
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disadvantage and marginalisation often suffered by women. Katherine T. Bartlett offers
three basic elements which characterise a feminist legal theory. These are:
(a) asking the 'woman question', i.e the extent of the presence and recognition of
women's experience in law;
(b) feminist practical reasoning, meaning a reasoning which proceeds from context
and values difference and the experience of the unempowered; and
(c) consciousness raising, meaning an exploration of the collective experience of women
through a sharing of individual experiences.
(Katherine T. Bartlett, 'Feminist Legal Method' (1970) 103 Harv L Rev, 829.) Upon
these bases feminist legal theory seeks to articulate women's perspective upon law and
thereby to empower women in the future development or redevelopment of law.
From a feminist perspective the expression of male domination in law may, in common
with other power structures subjected to critical legal analysis, take both overt and
covert, or even unrecognised, forms. Overt discrimination against women, as, for example,
in certain historic and sometimes continuing employment practices, is by definition
obvious when encountered. It is closely similar to race discrimination and other forms of
illegitimate disadvantage and falls more into the realm of policy making than theoretical
analysis. Covert or unrecognised bias presents much more difficult issues in the areas of
both theory and practice.
The key question here is the extent to which an inherently 'male' legal mindset implicitly
discriminates against women because it is framed in terms of male experience which does
not necessarily relate to that of women. Examples may be found, significantly, even in
some of the legal practices and provisions which are in principle directed towards
securing gender equality. Equality is often taken to mean simply the establishment of
identity in the treatment of women and men. It must first be said that in a broad range of
situations the establishment of the co-equal treatment of men and women as people is, of
course, precisely what gender equality does mean. However, in other issues, where the
needs and experiences of women and men and their respective experiences are not the
145
same, such an approach tends to treat women 'as if they are men with oppressive
consequences. In this context Joanne Conaghan and Louise Chudleigh remark that:
Current conceptions of employment reflect a male norm: they are built upon a notion
of the male worker who is full-time, long-term and unionised. Women workers tend to
deviate from this norm . . . their working patterns are often interrupted and part-time. .
. . Thus, labour law both embodies and conceals the gender division of labour and, by
focusing exclusively on the world of paid work, ignores the differing responsibilities
[of] . . . men and women . . . ('Women in Confinement: Can Labour Law Deliver the
Goods?' in Critical Legal Studies, p. 133 at p. 137.)
Women may be disadvantaged even by legal structures which purportedly seek to take
account of female needs and experience but which do so on the basis of analogy with
irrelevant, and sometimes outdated, male experience. An example of this is the treatment
of maternity leave as, in effect, analogous to the sick leave of a male employee, as well
as the assumption that parenting is an exclusively female role, shown in the very limited
provision for paternity leave. Other failures of law to deal adequately with women's
experience may readily be found. The issue of domestic violence and its treatment by
criminal law and law enforcement agencies is an obvious area of concern, characterised
by the recognition by English law in R v R [1991] of the possibility of rape within
marriage. Again in the employment sector, different retirement ages and pension
entitlement for women and men, which may prejudice either men or women who might
want to retire earlier or work later, has also been an issue of concern in the 1990s, with a
major compensation award to three women workers in the gas industry in June 1996.
The essential point in many, although not all, of these concerns has been put shortly by
Katherine T. Bartlett in her statement that the essential 'woman question' in law is:
how the law fails to take into account the experiences and values that seem
more typical of women than of men, for whatever reason, or how existing legal
standards and concepts might disadvantage women. ('Feminist Legal Methods'
(1970) 103 Harv L Rev, p. 829 at p. 837.)
The value of critical methodologies in the display and analysis of such gender distortions
in law and legal administration should be evident. The point to be emphasised is perhaps
that of the disadvantaging effect of concealed and frequently unrealised bias in a legal
order which has for the most part developed from male rather than female experience.
This is not to assert a 'conspiracy theory' or to claim that all law discriminates against
146
women. It is also not necessary to assert a gender-exclusive model in which there are
claimed to be wholly incompatible 'individualist' male and 'collectivist' female
viewpoints. This latter claim is also sometimes made in relation to different human
cultures and in both cases it can unwisely be forgotten that we are, in an Aristotelian
sense, social individuals, i.e. each person, woman or man, is an individual who lives in
association with others in a social structure. The key endeavour of feminist legal theory
may rather be to identify a fact of social, political and legal history which in many
important respects fails adequately to take account of the experience of somewhat more
than half of the human population. This is expressly a failure to afford mutuality and
recognition not only to women as members of society but, in fact, a failure to recognise
the mutuality of all society's members, women and men. Such failures, based upon
whatever form of improper discriminatory selectivity, generate alienation and, ultimately,
disfunctionality in the working of a legal order. The ways in which this has happened and
the present real extent of the problem are the issues central to the interface between
feminist legal theory and critical legal studies. This then opens the question of
deconstructive and positive agendas. Much of the critical legal endeavour is concerned
with the identification of defects and concealed agendas in law; feminism is at least as
much concerned with establishing proper recognition of women's experience in society
and law. Nonetheless, the identification of the sources of marginalisation and alienation
may be seen as at least an important stage in a process of response.
7.3.1 Introduction
Postmodern legal theory is the latest radical theory to challenge the liberal orthodoxies
that society has a natural structure and that history is simply a process of evolution
towards that truth. Grand claims made by Fukuyama, for instance, that history has come
to an end 'since the entire world - or those parts of it that counted for anything - had
converted to free market capitalism and liberal democracy', are ridiculed by the
postmodernists (C. Norris, The Truth about Postmodernism (Oxford: Blackwell, 1993), p.
1. See F. Fukuyama, The End of Liberty and the Last Man (London: Hamish Hamilton,
147
1992)). Liberalism and capitalism are not the end of the road but are simply the major
components of what the postmodernists call 'modernity'. Modernity's structures, its laws,
its literature, its architecture, its art, in fact any of its products, are all subject to
'deconstruction', a process which reveals numerous alternatives. An inherent aspect of
this process is a recognition that society is simply made up of a complex network of
subjectivities and contains no objective truths or natural laws upon which it can be
grounded.
Developing the radical critique promulgated by the Critical Legal Studies movement in
the 1980s, postmodern legal theory offers a more profound, indeed more disturbing
vision of law and society in the 1990s.
It defies the system, suspects all totalising thought and homogeneity and opens space for
the marginal, the different and the 'other'. Postmodernism is here presented as the
celebration of flux, dispersal, plurality and localism. (Douzinas and Warrington,
Postmodern Jurisprudence, p. 15.)
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The post-Enlightenment concept of progress, of constant modernisation, with its
overriding sense of movement towards the truth or 'meta-narratives' is rejected. In law,
modernist theories such as those presented by Hart, Kelsen, Dworkin and Finnis try to
portray law as a unified whole, and posit the rule of law as the method of 'neutral, non-
subjectivist resolution of value disagreement and social conflict'. However, in the reality of
the postmodern world where such rigid homogeneity is recognised as being imposed
arbitrarily, 'the panglossia of statutes, delegated legislation, administrative legislation and
adjudication, judicial and quasi-judicial decision-making; the multiform institutions and
personnel; and the plural non-formal methods of dispute avoidance and resolution cannot
be seen any longer as a coherent, closed ensemble of rules or values'. Despite this,
modernist theories still attempt to legitimate the idea of a closed, logical legal order.
The lineage of postmodernism in law can be traced back to Legal Realism's fundamental
tenet that law is an instrument of policy, which was amplified by the Critical Legal
Studies movement's statement that all law is politics. However, the postmodernist
disenchantment with the rationalist desire to make sense of the world is much more wide
ranging than either of its predecessors. Its targets are everything from art to science and
beyond. Indeed, its scepticism is so profound that it inherently knows no bounds, for
there are none, only 'flux, dispersal, plurality and localism' (Douzinas and Warrington,
Postmodern Jurisprudence., p. 15).
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The Enlightenment sought to free humanity from the chains of unthinking tradition and
religious bigotry. It sought to master the world through science and remake the world
according to the dictates of reason. It sought to understand and recast society in rational
and scientific terms, and it was confident about the ability of the human intellect to do
this. Two centuries later, humanity is imprisoned by new chains that the Enlightenment
forged for us. These are the chains created by science, technology, and rationality, which
in the course of liberating us subjected us to new forms of control, bureaucracy,
mediaization, suburbanization, and surveillance. We still need liberation, we still need
emancipation, but now it is from the products of our previous emancipation - from
computer data bases, sound bites, political action committees, voodoo economics,
electronic surveillance, commodified video images, and the industrialization of
professional culture. The emancipation we now require cannot be on the same terms as
those proposed by the Enlightenment. It must, at least in part, be a rejection of the
terms by which we freed ourselves from pre-Enlightenment thinking. (J. M. Balkin,
'What is Postmodern Constitutionalism?' (1992) 90 Michigan Law Review p. 1966 at p.
1989.)
If they do not wish to become supporters (of minor importance) of what exists, the
painter and the writer must refuse to lend themselves to such therapeutic uses.
They must question the rules of the art of painting or of narrative as they have
learned and received them from their predecessors. Soon those rules must appear
to them as a means to deceive, to seduce, and to reassure, which makes it
impossible for them to be 'true'. Under the common name of painting and
literature, an unprecedented split is taking place. Those who refuse to reexamine
the rules of art pursue successful careers in mass conformism by communicating,
by means of the 'correct rules', the endemic desire for reality with objects and
situations capable of gratifying it. (Lyotard, The Postmodern Condition, pp. 74-75.)
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Those painters and writers who do not conform to the accepted rules struggle to get their
works seen or read, for they are not accepted as 'real' artists. However, a realisation that
those rules will have originated in a context breaking piece of art or literature shows the
falsity of the belief in the truth as represented by those rules. Those rules in fact just
represent one view or approach, they have no superior or prior claim than any other view
or approach. A context breaking writer may start a literary school which becomes so
established that it eventually becomes the orthodoxy. The mistake is then made to elevate
the orthodoxy to the level of a received truth.
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through a net-like organisation. And not only do individuals circulate between its
threads; they are always in the position of simultaneously undergoing and exercising
this power. They are not only its inert or consenting target; they are also the elements
of its articulation. In other words, individuals are the vehicles of power not the points
of application. (M. Foucault, 'Two Lectures' in C. Gordon (ed.), Power/Knowledge
(New York: Harvester, 1980), p. 96.)
Take for example the case of R v Bentley (11 December 1952. The original trial is
recounted by the Court of Appeal on 30 July 1998 when Bentley's conviction was
quashed. The judgment can be found at http/Avww.courtservice.gov.uk/bentley.htm).
Bentley, aged 19, but with a much lower mental age, was convicted of murdering a police
constable after he was in a struggle with another officer. He shouted to his younger friend,
who had a gun, 'Let him have it Chris'. What does that mean? The prosecution argued it
meant 'shoot him', whereas Bentley's defence counsel argued 'let him have the gun'.
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Bentley was convicted and hanged. It could be strongly argued that Bentley was only
guilty of 'using ambiguous language'. He did not shoot the officer, but he was a victim of
the system that needed to find someone guilty and to execute them, particularly when the
murder involved an attack on the representatives of order, and the individual who fired the
gun was too young to be sentenced to death. The law was simply a reflection of society's
attitudes. Postmodernism considers such cases, and given the inherent absence of 'truth' in
any case, recognises the plight of the defendant as well as the victim.
However, clearly the case of R v Bentley is a hard case in terms of establishing intent. In
the case of someone who in a similar case shouts 'shoot him dead', then the positivist
would contend that there is no ambiguity in language and the defendant is clearly guilty.
The postmodernist, however, would contest the rigid invocation of the issue of intent by
the courts. A parallel can be drawn with Camus' discussion of suicide (A. Camus, The Myth
of Sisyphus (London: Penguin, 1981), p. 13). Camus states that there are multiple
explanations for why a person commits suicide including the fact that the individual's
friend addresses him indifferently on the day in question. Similarly, there are multiple
explanations for why the defendant uttered those words, including the possibility that he
feared for his own life.
In essence there is no truth, only versions of it. Presumably, for the postmodernist, the
court should cease to apply rigid rules of law on intention for instance and widen its
doors to let in an open-ended discussion about the responsibility of other individuals and
the wider community for the crime. In essence this was the end result of the inquiry into
the death of the London teenager, Stephen Lawrence (Report of Sir William
MacPherson, The Stephen Lawrence Inquiry, Cm 4262-1 (London: The Stationery
Office, 24 February 1999)), where responsibility for the death of the black teenager was
widened beyond the five suspected of the stabbing to the police, and then to society as a
whole where there is clearly still a high level of racism. However, this 'postmodernist'
conclusion seems to have been forced only because institutional racism in the police led
to the failure to prosecute the five suspects. If a 'proper’ case had been mounted against
them, then responsibility would have stopped at the five individuals.
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The rigid structures of the law have been variously used to provide an artificial definition
of a 'tribe' and of 'native title' thus denying land rights to the Mashpee Indians of Cape
Cod in the United States (J. Wicke, 'Postmodern Identity and Legal Subject', p. 465), and
the Yorta Yorta people of Australia (Guardian Weekly, 21 March 1999, p. 13). Although
it is inherently unclear as to what a postmodernist 'result' would be in these cases, it is
contended that the coming together of 'postmodernism and the Law, with its stern capital
"L" intact, promises to be a dynamic coupling, postmodernism offering to put its
delirious spin on the rigor and fixity of the body of the law'. Presumably then, given
postmodernist concern with the 'other', the law should seek to accommodate their claims
but to what extent and in what manner cannot be determined until we have a truly fluid
postmodernist debate in such disputes.
There appears to be a contradiction at the heart of the postmodernist concern with the
'other', at least if this concern results in the elevation of certain 'truths' over other
contrasting ones. In many societies women and racial minorities have been
disadvantaged, there is no doubt about that, but the question remains whether
postmodernism can embrace these 'others' over their oppressors, namely the sexists and
racists still found in great numbers in society. Hilaire Barnett recognised that
postmodernism presents a problem for feminism:
The implications of the postmodern critique for feminist jurisprudence are profound. If
‘grand theory’ is no longer sufficient to explain women’s condition, concepts such as
patriarchy and gender, the public and private, loose their explanatory force, and
throw doubt on the potential for a convincing coherent theoretical understanding of
women’s lives and conditions. In place of grand theory, there must be developed
critiques which concentrate on the reality of the diversity of individual women's lives
and conditions, critiques which reject the universalist, foundation a list philosophical
and political understanding offered by modernism. With the 'age of innocence' lost, in
its place there exists diversity, plurality, competing rationalities, competing
perspectives and uncertainty as to the potentiality of theory. (H. Barnett, Introduction
to Feminist Theory (London: Cavendish Publishers, 1998), p. 180.)
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This certainly challenges the different branches of feminist thought, from liberal through
to cultural and radical, to re-think their generalisations over the condition of women in
society.
Inherent in the postmodernist tradition is what Foucault has labelled the 'death of the
Subject' (M. Foucault, Power I Knowledge (New York: Pantheon Books, 1972), p. 117),
which simply means 'recognising the multiplicity of subjectivities, identities, which
inhere in the individual and recognising that each individual is comprised of multiple
subjectivities. The postmodern Subject has multiple identities as he or she moves in and
out of differing milieux'. The question, in the radical tradition, is why a particular
individual is oppressed or is the oppressor. For women the answer is not always because
of male dominance, or at least that is the implication of postmodernism. Hilaire Barnett,
provides a way forward for feminism if it is to embrace the latest radicalism:
Feminist theory which fails to identify the differences between women, and the
impact which those differences have on women's lives, fails to be inclusive. The
scepticism with gender may be helpful in so far as it obliges feminist scholarship
to 'demote' gender as an organising concept, in so far as it has been the dominant
concept in feminist modernist theory, and to set gender alongside crucial other
factors such as race, class, age, sexual orientation, the local and specific (as
opposed to the universalising and general) and so forth. Thus a postmodern
feminism must focus on the specificities of women's lives, rather than assuming
the commonality of all women's lives. Feminist pluralism must replace feminist
modernism. (Barnett, Introduction to Feminist Jurisprudence, p. 197.)
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Michigan Law Review 1 at p. 13. Schlag is deconstructing, B. Ackerman, We the People
- Foundations (Cambridge Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1991), pp. 6-7; R. Dworkin,
Law's Empire (London: Fontana, 1986), pp. 238-40; J. Rawls, A Theory of Justice
(Cambridge Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1971), p. 11; O. Fiss, 'Objectivity and
Interpretation' (1982) 34 Stanford Law Review 739 at p. 745). The refusal of liberalism to
enforce even what appears to be shared morality in favour of an elitist academic representa-
tion of that morality is perhaps evidence of the force of the postmodernist critique. Even
Lord Devlin's shared morality, criticised by many for coming too close to opinion poll
morality, is based on the hypothetical man on the Clapham omnibus. Modernity's denial
that society's 'values' are based on a shifting, prejudiced, majoritarian morality is
unconvincing. The moral relativism revealed by postmodernism may be nearer to reality
but its potential reduction of the views of Martin Luther King to the same level as those of
the Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan is, to say the least, deeply disturbing.
In the use of language, modernism posits the belief that language discloses dire
relationship between the word and the world - the principal function of language is
representational - it depicts the way things are. The proposition depicts reality. 'This is a
chair' is a statement of truth. However, even modernists admit that some statements are
simply statements of opinion - this chair is beautiful'. The postmodern approach is that
there is no division of language into fact and opinion, all statements are opinions. How
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can this be? How can a challenge be made to the basic proposition that 'this is a chair'?
The answer is because language is inherently indeterminate. The postmodernist would
argue that there is no true meaning to the concept of chair - even what appear to be
factual statements are open to debate and deconstruction.
This is all the more so in law in which the language is already an abstraction from reality
- the concepts of 'family' or 'property' in law are removed from the ones in 'reality' - and
the debates revolve around them. Nevertheless, the question to be asked is if there is no
meaning in legal language, why do postmodernists concern themselves with it? The
answer lies within semiotics which aims at an understanding of 'the system of signs which
creates meaning within a culture'. Language is all there is. 'There is nothing outside the
text' - that is the postmodernist message - language has to be examined to see what it
reveals about the person using it or the class of persons using it (see J. M. Balkin, 'Being
Just with Deconstruction' (1994) 3(3) Social and Legal Studies 393 at p. 394). Statements
in law are assertions - assertions of the truth but simply assertions. In choosing between
competing assertions, an individual will favour those which clash least with everything else
that person takes to be true. In legal terms the law is self-reinforcing since individuals
agree with the 'right' legal propositions because they fit into the legal system which is
presumed to be 'right' -the whole system is based on dominant assertions which must
ultimately be built on pure ideology or power. In this way the law and the legal system
are self-perpetuating hierarchies.
The overriding postmodernist message is that the truth is, there is no truth. If everything is
subjective, there are no meta-narratives, no overriding values, then is deconstruction
simply painting a desperate picture of society in the late twentieth century - a cultural and
moral wasteland? Binder's evaluation of Derrida is that 'probably no one has contributed
more to the . . . disenchantment with cultural identity than this Algerian born post-
structuralist' (G. Binder, 'Representing Nazism: Advocacy and Identity at the Trial of
Klaus Barbie' (1989) 98 Yale Law Journal 1321 at p. 1373). Furthermore, Binder points
to the inherent problem with post-structuralism - its valueless-ness. There is no measure
by which we can evaluate the Holocaust, nor any other inherently evil act such as the
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genocide in Rwanda in 1994. Derrida was clearly aware of this consequence when trying
to defend another deconstructive theorist, Paul de Man, who had been accused of pro-
Nazism. Although Derrida tried to define 'deconstruction as opposition to Nazism, he
employs the very logic he condemns. In so doing, he unacceptably implicates those who
identify with Judaism in their own persecution' (Binder, 'Representing Nazism', p. 1373).
Binder expands on this conclusion:
First because deconstruction shows every argument to contain its opposite, it seems
nihilistic. Second because deconstruction is said to 'annihilate the subject' - to deny
the individual identities of authors and of characters - it seems to deny individual
responsibility for evil. Third, because it exposes the futility of efforts to deny loss,
contradiction and violence, deconstruction seems to urge acceptance of their
necessity. Perhaps an 'antihumanist' philosophy that attempts to annihilate the
subject sees no great loss in the annihilation of subjects. (Binder, 'Representing
Nazism', p. 1377.)
The question then is whether cultures and minorities will disappear because of possible
post-structuralist 'enlightenment', or because Nazism or a similar ideology has already
'cleansed' them. Individuals within ethnic, religious or other minorities, whatever our
views of their creed, deserve better protection from persecution than this - one such form
of protection is the law, for instance the rights of minorities contained in Article 27 of the
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International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and its accompanying mechanisms.
International law is not posited as a panacea, but at least it provides a universal, concrete,
and in many ways 'moral' code - a form of jus gentium. Of course, the texts of international
laws are equally susceptible to the pens of the deconstructionists.
The deconstruction of legal concepts, or of the social vision that informs them, is not
nihilistic. Deconstruction is not a call for us to forget moral certainty, but to remember
aspects of human life that were pushed into the background by the necessities of the
dominant legal conception we call into question. Deconstruction is not a denial of the
legitimacy of rules and principles; it is an affirmation of human possibilities that have
been overlooked or forgotten in the privileging of particular legal ideas . . . By
recalling the elements of human life relegated to the margin in a given social theory,
deconstructive readings challenge us to remake the dominant conceptions of our
society. (J. M. Balkin, 'Deconstructive Practice and Legal Theory' (1987) 96 Yale Law
Journal 743 at p. 763. Emphasis added.)
The question remains as to where those moral certainties can be found. That it is wrong
to kill a person for no reason - killing for killing's sake - is a moral certainty for affirmative
postmodernists as well as natural lawyers, but while the latter can point to their universal,
unchanging, rational moral code, all the former has is a conviction that it is wrong: 'the
point is that morality is not a matter of truth or logical demonstration. It is a matter of
conviction based on experience, emotion and conversation' (J. W. Singer, 'The Player and
the Cards: Nihilism and Legal Theory' (1984) 94 Yale Law Journal 1 at p. 39).
Nevertheless, 'the positive ethical thrust of deconstructive theory' is inherent in its
challenges to the dominant conceptions which govern liberal (legal) orders.
Deconstruction reveals the law's inadequacies. Often legal language is clearly
indeterminate. Thus a deconstruction of how it is used to control and to oppress is clearly
ethical. Deconstruction helps individuals towards liberation upon realisation that the
system or society they are part of has no superior claim than a system or society they
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might prefer. Deconstruction may appear anarchical but it does reveal the coercive,
arbitrary and contingent nature of the legal system, and the broader societal structures.
Derrida himself makes the claim that 'deconstruction is justice', and that justice itself is
not susceptible to deconstruction (which implies that deconstruction has become the
meta-narrative). The logic of deconstruction does not simply apply to legitimating legal
concepts such as the Rule of Law, or the constitution, but to much more basic 'truths',
whereby good is given priority over evil, and life over death. Derrida's analysis of these
dichotomies or polarities is intended to reveal that there is no rational process whereby
one is given priority over the other.
It may be because of deconstruction's lack of any limits - there are no concepts that
are protected from its application - that Norris, while attracted by deconstruction, states
that 'deconstruction is . . . an activity of thought which cannot be consistently acted on
- that way madness lies - but which yet possesses an inescapable rigour of its own'.
Personal moral convictions may not be enough to stop a general descent into the
heart of darkness. Is it enough for deconstructionists to state that '[p]eople do not
want to be beastly to each other . . . The evidence is all around us that people are often
caring, supporting, loving, and altruistic, both in their family lives and in their relations
with strangers'. From the killing fields of Cambodia of the 1970s, the genocide in
Rwanda in 1994, to the indiscriminate shootings occurring within the United States and
other developed States on a regular basis, there does appear to be plenty of evidence of
inhumanity. Postmodernism does not provide any answers to this, any criteria for
universalising the clear wrongness of these acts, indeed its reduction of all 'positive'
values to the same level as all 'negative' values, may be said to condone, even
encourage it. At most all that Derridian deconstruction seems to provide is stated by its
chief proponent in drawing conclusions on the Holocaust:
I do not know whether from this nameless thing called the final solution one can
draw something which still deserves the name of a lesson. But if there were a lesson to
be drawn, a unique lesson among the always singular lessons of murder, from even a
singular murder, from all the collective exterminations of history (because each
individual murder and each collective murder is singular, thus infinite and
incommensurable) the lesson that we can draw today - and if we can do so then we
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must - is that we must think, know, represent for ourselves, formalize, judge the possible
complicity between all these discourses and the worst (here the final solution). (J.
Derrida, 'Force of Law', pp. 62-3.)
It may be because of this sort of equivocation that 'most liberals . . . are utterly
repelled by postmodernism's more extravagant visions, which are cognitively
relativist, morally nihilistic, and politically anarchistic' (M. Osiel, Mass Atrocity,
Collective Memory, and the Law (New Brunswick: Transaction, 1997), p. 294).
1. Identify and define the main attacks on liberal legal theory by CLS.
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UNIT EIGHT
JUSTICE
8.1 Introduction
In the previous chapters, students are able to understand the subject matter of
jurisprudence and the different endeavours made to provide a complete theory of law.
You must have noticed that most theories, especially natural law, tried to explain what
law is through its ultimate end, i.e. justice. This and the following two chapters (since
liberty and equality are principles of justice) are about Justice. Justice concerns the proper
ordering of things and persons within a society. Usually, people use a simplistic division
of justice such as corrective justice, referring to the manner with which society address or
redress wrong and distributive justice, concerned with how basic social resources are
distributed among members. These aspects of justice are treated in detail by many
courses in law and other disciplines like economics. In jurisprudence, we are concerned
with how society can cooperate for the interest of all and how the fundamental
institutions of such cooperation can be just or founded up on principles of justice. The
issues are broadly analyzed so that they apply to every situation in which they arise; for
example, chapter ten (equality) has similar approach. In addition, we are also concerned
with the fundamental concept of justice behind the two aspects. As a concept, it has been
the subject of philosophical, legal, and theological reflection and debate throughout
history. A number of important questions surrounding justice have been fiercely debated
over the course of western history: What is justice? What does it demand of individuals
and societies? What are liberty and equality? Why are they principles of justice? What is
the proper distribution of rights, duties, opportunity, wealth and resources in society:
equal, meritocratic, according to status, or some other arrangement? There is a myriad of
possible answers to these questions from divergent perspectives on the political and
philosophical spectrum. That will be the concern of this chapter and the next two chapters
but this chapter provides the foundation for the rest.
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8.2. Objectives
After studying this chapter students will able to:
• Define justice
• Distinguish the concept and conceptions of justice
• Identify the principles of justice
• Identify under what condition those principles are selected
• State the circumstances, which give rise to the question of justice
• Explain the concept of justice as fairness
• Define group differentiated rights
• Identify why group differentiated rights are the question of justice
• Explain how a just system can accommodate group differentiated rights
Q. What is justice? What are the principles of justice? What circumstances give
rise to the question of justice? What is fairness?
The most complete argument for the theory of justice is possibly that provided by Rawls,
who argues for his two principles of justice in “Theory of Justice” (1972). His theory is
of justice as fairness, accepting those principles that would result from an ‘original
position’ for the purpose of social cooperation. In this original position the parties set out,
subject to conditions considered reasonable (also under veil of ignorance) and fair, to
agree the principles by which their society should be organized. The original position is
thus a social contract position (remember natural rights theory?) although the contract is a
hypothetical one. The conditions to be fulfilled before the contract are basic democratic
freedoms (also known as pre-conditions for democracy) such as expression,
demonstration, association, and vote and to be voted for. The ‘veil of ignorance’ requires
parties to temporarily put aside their backgrounds such as envy, sex and status (social and
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economic) because those are unnecessary for the parties to reach agreement on
reasonable and fair principles for all.
Rawls makes a distinction between the concepts of justice and conception of justice. He
claims that any theory of justice must deal with both of these. By a concept of justice,
Rawls means the role of its principles in assigning rights and duties and in defining the
appropriate division of social advantage. It is essentially an objective phenomenon. By a
conception of justice, he means the interpretation of the role of these principles in a
particular situation; for example, equal distribution can be interpreted in many ways for
many particular situations to provide us conceptions like liberal, utilitarian and so on. He
acknowledges that this is much more subjective.
Rawls’ theory in its own terms is designed to cope with situations where mutually
disinterested (self-interested) persons put forward conflicting claims to a division of
goods and services under conditions of moderate scarcity. His theory is of no application
in conditions of total scarcity.
The conception of justice for Rawls can be stated in the form of two principles as
follows: first, each person participating in a practice, or affected by it, has an equal right
to the most extensive liberty compatible with a like liberty for all; and
Second, inequalities are arbitrary unless it is reasonable to expect that they will work out
for everyone's advantage (especially for the least advantaged), and provided the positions
and offices to which they attach, or from which they may be gained, are open to all.
The first principle is about providing everyone with basic human freedoms such as
freedom of thought, religion, belief, expression…etc. This principle highlights equality of
liberty for all, which means nobody is entitled to more or less liberty. The liberty referred
to here should be the most extensive that includes all the list of freedoms and each to its
most extent possible (limitations which do not apply for all are not allowed on some).
There is no absolute freedom and therefore all of them have to be limited at some point in
order to make them compatible with other people’s freedom (for a detailed discussion,
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refer to the chapter on Liberty). The second principle is about equal distribution of
primary social resources to everyone and inequalities are arbitrary but incentives should
be provided to the least advantaged without sacrificing the interest of the rest. The public
offices should be open for all under fair electoral system and positions should be
allocated on the basis of merit (again, there is more discussion in the chapter on
Equality). The parties will choose these principles since they are rational self-interested
people under the veil of ignorance and the principles serve the interest of all. The parties
also want the social cooperation to work and therefore, they want everyone to agree to the
principles.
The first principle has absolute priority over the second. This means there cannot be a
trade-off of liberty for the sake of distribution or economic development. However,
Rawls admits that under scarcity or poverty this rule can be relaxed until a certain level of
economic development is reached because the question is of survival rather than justice.
In addition, the question of justice does not arise among the community of saints but only
between self-interested people. The parties in the contract treat each other in farness, as
reasonable person averting any risk since it means treating others as one wants to be
treated. The contract affects not only those participating in it but also those affected by it
or those benefiting from the practice. Consequently, the contract involves future
generations and the parties will be saving, as they are self-interested on family basis too.
Once the two principles are selected out of various alternatives, all the basic institutions
of the community will be found upon them and such system is considered as just and the
result as fair. There will be more discussion on the two principles, in chapter nine and
ten. In the mean time, the Canadian philosopher, Kymlicka, most notable for his works
on communitarianism, identifies a major gap (unaddressed issue) in Rawls’ theory in the
following section.
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8.4 Will Kymlicka: Justice and Minority Rights
Q. What are group specific rights? What is the best mechanism to accommodate
and protect these rights?
Virtually, all liberal democracies are either multinational or Polyethnic, or both. The
'challenge of multiculturalism' is to accommodate these national and ethnic differences in
a stable and morally defensible way. It is increasingly accepted in many countries that
some forms of cultural difference can only be accommodated through special legal or
constitutional measures, above and beyond the common rights of citizenship. Some forms
of group difference can only be accommodated if their members have certain group-
specific rights. For example, a recent government publication in Canada noted that:
In the Canadian experience, it has not been enough to protect only universal individual
rights. Here, the Constitution and ordinary laws also protect other rights accorded to
individuals as members of certain communities. This accommodation of both types of
rights makes our constitution unique and reflects the Canadian value of equality that
accommodates difference. The fact that community rights exist alongside individual
rights goes to the very heart of what Canada is all about. (Government of Canada 199 1
a: 3)
Such a combination exists in many other federal systems in Europe, Asia, and Africa.
Even the constitution of the United States, which is often seen as a paradigm of
individualism, allows for various group-specific rights, including the special status of
American Indians and Puerto Ricans.
There are at least three forms of group-specific rights: (1) self-government rights; (2)
polyethnic rights; and (3) special representation rights.
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8.4.1 Self-government Rights
In most multination states, the component nations are inclined to demand some form of
political autonomy or territorial jurisdiction, so as to ensure the full and free development
of their cultures and the best interests of their people. At the extreme, nations may wish to
secede, if they think their self-determination is impossible within the larger state.
Similar systems of self-government exist, or are being sought, by many other indigenous
peoples. A recent international declaration regarding the rights of indigenous peoples
emphasizes the importance of political self-government. In many parts of the world,
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however, the hope for political powers is almost utopian, and the more immediate goal is
simply to secure the existing land base from further erosion by settlers and resource
developers. Indeed, a recent study showed that the single largest cause of ethnic conflict
in the world today is the struggle by indigenous peoples for the protection of their land
rights.'
Self-government claims, then, typically take the form of devolving political power to a
political unit substantially controlled by the members of the national minority, and
substantially corresponding to their historical homeland or territory. It is important to
note that these claims are not seen as a temporary measure, or as a remedy for a form of
oppression that we might (or ought) someday eliminate. On the contrary, these rights are
often described as 'inherent', and so permanent (which is one reason why national
minorities seek to have them entrenched in the constitution).
These group-specific measures – which Kymlicka calls ‘polyethnic rights’ - are intended
to help ethnic groups and religious minorities express their cultural particularity and pride
without it hampering their success in the economic and political institutions of the
dominant society. Like self-government rights, these polyethnic rights are not seen as
temporary, because the cultural differences they protect are not something we seek to
eliminate. But, unlike self-government rights, polyethnic rights are usually intended to
promote integration into the larger society, not self-government.
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8.4.3. Special representation right
While the traditional concern of national minorities and ethnic groups has been with
either self-government or polyethnic rights, there has been increasing interest by these
groups, as well as other non-ethnic social groups, in the idea of special representation
rights.
However, there is increasing interest in the idea that a certain number of seats in the
legislature should be reserved for the members of disadvantaged or marginalized groups.
Group representation rights are often defended as a response to some systemic
disadvantage or barrier in the political process, which makes it impossible for the group's
views and interests to be effectively represented. In so far as these rights are seen as a
response to oppression or systemic disadvantage, they are most plausibly seen as a
temporary measure on the way to a society where the need for special representation no
longer exists - a form of political 'affirmative action'. Society should seek to remove the
oppression and disadvantage, thereby eliminating the need for these rights.
However, the issue of special representation rights for groups is complicated, because
special representation is sometimes defended, not on grounds of oppression, but as a
corollary of self-government. A minority's right to self-government would be severely
weakened if some external body could unilaterally revise or revoke its powers, without
consulting the minority or securing its consent. Hence it would seem to be a corollary of
self-government that the national minority be guaranteed representation on any body
which can interpret or modify its powers of self-government (e.g. the Supreme Court in
USA hypothetically and the House of Federation in Ethiopia actually). Since the claims
of self-government are seen as inherent and permanent, so too are the guarantees of
representation which flow from it (unlike guarantees grounded on oppression).
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8.5. The Equality Argument
Many defenders of group-specific rights for ethnic and national minorities insist that they
are needed to ensure that all citizens are treated with genuine equality. On this view, 'the
accommodation of differences is the essence of true equality', and group-specific rights
are needed to accommodate our differences. This argument is correct, within certain
limits.
Any plausible theory of justice should recognize the fairness of these external protections
for national minorities. They are clearly justified, Kymlicka believes, within a liberal
egalitarian theory, such as Rawls's and Dworkin's, which emphasizes the importance of
rectifying unchosen inequalities. Indeed inequalities in cultural membership are just the
sort which Rawls says we should be concerned about, since their effects are 'profound
and pervasive and present from birth' (Rawls 1971, Dworkin 1981)."
This equality-based argument will only endorse special rights for national minorities if
there actually is a disadvantage with respect to cultural membership, and if the rights
actually serve to rectify the disadvantage. Hence, the legitimate scope of these rights will
vary with the circumstances. In North America, indigenous groups are more vulnerable to
majority decisions than the Quebecois or Puerto Ricans, and so their external protections
will be more extensive. For example, restrictions on the sale of land, which are necessary
in the context of indigenous peoples, are not necessary, and hence not justified, in the
case of Quebec or Puerto Rico (check FDRE Constitution concerning land). One of the
most important determinants of whether a culture survives is whether its language is the
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language of government - i.e. the language of public schooling, courts, legislatures,
welfare agencies, health services, etc.
So the real question is what is a fair way to recognize languages, draw boundaries, and
distribute powers? And the answer is that we should aim at ensuring that all national
groups have the opportunity to maintain themselves as a distinct culture, if they so
choose. Hence group-differentiated self-government rights compensate for unequal
circumstances which put the members of minority cultures at a systemic disadvantage in
the cultural marketplace; regardless of their personal choices in life. This is one of many
areas in which true equality requires not identical treatment, but rather differential
treatment in order to accommodate differential needs.
This does not mean that we should entirely reject the idea of the cultural market place.
Once the societal cultures of national groups are protected, through language rights and
territorial autonomy, then the cultural market-place does have an important role to play in
determining the character of the culture.
The equality argument assumes that the state must treat its citizens with equal respect.
But there is the prior question of determining which citizens should be governed by
which states. For example, how did the American government acquire the legitimate
authority to govern Puerto Rico or the Navaho? And how did the Canadian government
acquire legitimate authority over the Quebecois and the Metis? (It is helpful to ask this
question for the state of Ethiopia. Especially, you should focus on where the authority of
the state came from its people in the Axumit era, Zagwe, Zemene Mesafint, Gonder,
Emperor Yohanis IV, before and after Emperor Menlik II)
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United Nations declarations state that all 'peoples' are entitled to 'self determination' - i.e.
an independent state. Obviously this principle is not reflected in existing boundaries, and
it would be destabilizing, and indeed impossible, to fulfil. Moreover, not all peoples want
their own state. Hence, it is not uncommon for two or more peoples to decide to form a
federation. And if the two communities are of unequal size, it is not uncommon for the
smaller culture to demand various group-differentiated rights as part of the terms of
federation. Forming a federation is one way of exercising a people's right of self-
determination, and the historic terms of federation reflect the group's judgment about how
best to exercise that right.
In short, the way in which a national minority was incorporated often gives rise to certain
group-differentiated rights. If incorporation occurred through a voluntary federation,
certain rights might be spelled out in the terms of federation (e.g. in treaties or
constitutions), and there are legal and moral arguments for respecting these agreements.
If incorporation was involuntary (e.g. colonization), then the national minority might
have a claim of self-determination under international law, which can be exercised by
renegotiating the terms of federation so as to make it a more voluntary federation.
(Consider whether FDRE Constitution is the result of renegotiation).
While the equality and historical arguments often lead to the same result, they are none
the less quite distinct. On the historical argument, the question is not how should the state
treat 'its' minorities, but rather what are the terms under which two or more peoples
decided to become partners? The question is not how the state should act fairly in
governing its minorities, but what are the limits to the state's right to govern them?
Where historical agreements are absent or disputed, groups are likely to appeal to the
equality argument. For example, how should we respond to agreements that are now
unfair, due to changing conditions? Because of these changing circumstances, and
because the original agreements are hard to interpret, many minority communities want
to renegotiate their historical agreements. They want to make their group-differentiated
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rights more explicit in the constitution, and often more expansive. This is a major cause
of the current constitutional crisis in Canada.
This suggests that, if we wish to defend group differentiated rights, we should not rely
solely on historical agreements. Since historical agreements must always be interpreted,
and inevitably need to be updated and revised, we must be able to ground the historical
agreements in a deeper theory of justice. The historical and equality arguments must
work together.
How can and why should a liberal theory of justice (like Rawls) accommodate such
rights?
Liberals can and should accept a wide range of group-differentiated rights for national
minorities and ethnic groups, without sacrificing their core commitments to individual
freedom and social equality. Kymlicka tried to show how freedom of choice is dependent
on social practices, cultural meanings, and a shared language. Our capacity to form and
revise a conception of the good is intimately tied to our membership in a societal culture,
since the context of individual choice is the range of options passed down to us by our
culture. Deciding how to lead our lives is, in the first instance, a matter of exploring the
possibilities made available by our culture.
However, minority cultures in multination states may need protection from the economic
or political decisions of the majority culture if they are to provide this context for their
members. For example, they may need self-governing powers or veto rights over certain
decisions regarding language and culture, and may need to limit the mobility of migrants
or immigrants into their homelands.
While these group-differentiated rights for national minorities may seem discriminatory
at first glance, since they allocate individual rights and political powers differentially on
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the basis of group membership, they are in fact consistent with liberal principles of
equality. They are indeed required by the view, defended by Rawls and Dworkin, that
justice requires removing or compensating for undeserved or 'morally arbitrary'
disadvantages, particularly if these are 'profound and pervasive and present from birth'
(Rawls 1971). Were it not for these group differentiated rights, the members of minority
cultures would not have the same ability to live and work in their own language and
culture that the members of majority cultures take for granted. This can be seen as just as
profound and morally arbitrary a disadvantage as the inequalities in race and class that
liberals more standardly worry about.
Each of these claims is plausible. Anyone who disputes them would be required to
provide some alternative account of what makes meaningful choices available to people,
or what justice requires in terms of language rights, public holidays, political boundaries,
and the division of powers. Moreover, one would also have to offer an alternative account
of the justification for restricting citizenship to the members of a particular group, rather
than making it available to anyone who desires it. It is not enough to simply assert that a
liberal state should respond to ethnic and national differences with benign neglect. That is
an incoherent position that avoids addressing the inevitable connections between state
and culture.
The idea that group-differentiated rights for national and ethnic groups can and should be
accepted by liberals is hardly a radical suggestion. In fact, many multination liberal
democracies already accept such an obligation, and provide public schooling and
government services in the language of national minorities. Many have also adopted
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some form of federalism, so that national minorities will form a majority in one of the
federal units (states, provinces, or cantons). And many polyethnic liberal states have
adopted various forms of polyethnic policies and group-specific rights or exemptions for
immigrant groups. Providing a liberal defence of minority rights does not create a
mandate for vast change. It merely ratifies and explains changes that have taken place in
the absence of theory.
1. Can you relate the process of making of the FDRE Constitution with Rawls’ original
position?
2. Examine how and where the two principles of justice are incorporated within the
FDRE Constitution.
3. Why do you think Rawls failed to include group specific rights within the first
principle? Do you think his theory of justice becomes complete with group specific
rights?
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CHAPTER NINE
LIBERTY
9.1 Introduction
In the previous chapter, you studied justice and its principles. One of the two principles is
maximum compatible liberty for all. The concept of liberty and the rationale behind its
protection is the focus of this chapter. Liberty is generally considered as a concept of
political philosophy that identifies the condition in which an individual has the ability to
act according to his or her own will. However, there are two different concepts of liberty
based on ‘ideological’ differences. One is concerned with the autonomy of the individual
and absence of external interference. This has been embraced by the West from the
natural right theories and American Constitution up until today. All individual rights are
considered to be of this sort. The second idea of liberty focuses on people in general and
groups but does not rule out individuals. It is concerned with not only external
interferences but also mostly internal ones, which means that people may not be capable
of freedom even in the absence of external interference and thus may need assistance
from the state. This idea crudely formulated by the Greeks in the form of democracy
(government of the people), developed by Enlightenment philosophers, incorporated in
American Constitution, reformulated by Marx and used/abused by Communists and
dictators. All group rights are examples of the second version. However, both concepts
have been recognized by the UN and given protection in international human rights
instruments. In Rawls’ theory of justice, liberty refers to the first version only. Why did
he choose that? What justifies one over the other? Is there a third way, which
encompasses and compromises both? This chapter will introduce students with different
theories of liberty and tries to respond to these questions.
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9.2. Objectives
The first of the two political senses of liberty which Berlin calls the 'negative' sense, is
involved in the answer to the question 'What is the area within which the subject - a
person or group of persons - is or should be left to do or be what he is able to do or be,
without interference by other persons?' The second, which Berlin calls the ‘positive’
sense, is involved in the answer to the question 'What, or who, is the source of control or
interference that can determine someone to do, or be, this rather than that?'
Berlin states, I am normally said to be free to the degree to which no man or body of
men interferes with my activity. Political liberty in this sense is simply the area within
which a man can act unobstructed by others. If I am prevented by others from doing what
I could otherwise do, I am to that degree unfree; and if this area is invaded by other men
beyond a certain minimum, I can be described as being coerced, or, it may be, enslaved.
Coercion is not, however, a term that covers every form of inability. Coercion implies the
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deliberate interference of other human beings within the area in which I could otherwise
act. You lack political liberty or freedom only if you are prevented from attaining a goal
by human beings.
Mere incapacity to attain a goal is not lack of political freedom. If my poverty were a
kind of disease which prevented me from buying bread, or paying for the journey round
the world or getting my case heard, (as lameness prevents me from running) this inability
would not naturally be described as a lack of freedom, least of all political freedom. It is
only because I believe that my inability to get a given thing is due to the fact that other
human beings have made arrangements where by I am, whereas others are not, prevented
from having enough money with which to pay for it that I think myself a victim of
coercion or slavery. In other words, this use of the term depends on a particular social and
economic theory about the causes of my poverty or weakness. The criterion of oppression
is the part to be played by other human beings, directly or indirectly, with or without the
intention of doing so, in frustrating my wishes. The wider the area of non-interference
means that the wider my freedom.
This is what the classical English political philosophers meant when they used this word.
They disagreed about how wide the area could or should be. They supposed that it could
not be unlimited because if it were, it would entail a state in which all men could
boundlessly interfere with all other men. This kind of 'natural' freedom would lead to
social chaos in which men's minimum needs would not be satisfied; or else the liberties
of the weak would be suppressed by the strong. Because they perceived that human
purposes and activities do not automatically harmonize with one another, and because
(whatever their official doctrines) they put high value on other goals, such as justice, or
happiness, or culture, or security, or varying degrees of equality, they were prepared to
curtail freedom in the interests of other values and, indeed, of freedom itself. For, without
this, it was impossible to create the kind of association that they thought desirable.
Consequently, it is assumed by these thinkers that law must limit the area of men’s free
action.
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Equally it is assumed, especially by such libertarians as Locke and Mill in England, and
Constant and Tocqueville in France, that there ought to exist a certain minimum area of
personal freedom which, must on no account be violated. For if it is overstepped, the
individual will find himself in an area too narrow for even that minimum development of
his natural faculties which alone makes it possible to pursue, and even to conceive, the
various ends which men hold good or right or sacred. It follows that a frontier must be
drawn between the area of private life and that of public authority. Where it is to be
drawn is a matter of argument. Men are largely interdependent, and no man's activity is
so completely private as never to obstruct the lives of others in any way. The liberty of
some must depend on the restraint of others. 'Freedom for an Oxford don', others have
been known to add, 'is a very different thing from freedom for an Egyptian peasant.'
It is true that to offer political rights, or safeguards against intervention by the state, to
men who are half-naked, illiterate, underfed, and diseased is to mock their condition; they
need medical help or education before they can understand, or make use of, an increase in
their freedom. What is freedom to those who cannot make use of it? Without adequate -
conditions for the- use of freedom, what is the value of freedom? First things come first:
there are situations in which boots are superior to the works of Shakespeare; individual
freedom is not everyone's primary need. For freedom is not the mere absence of
frustration of whatever kind; this would inflate the meaning of the word until it meant too
much or too little. The Egyptian peasant needs clothes or medicine before, and more than,
personal liberty, but the minimum freedom that he needs today, and the greater degree of
freedom that he may need tomorrow, is not some species of freedom peculiar to him, but
identical with that of professors, artists, and millionaires.
What troubles the consciences of Western liberals is not the belief that the freedom that
men seek differs according to their social or economic conditions, but that the minority
who possess it have gained it by exploiting, or, at least, averting their gaze from, the vast
majority who do not. They believe, with good reason, that if individual liberty is an
ultimate end for human beings, others should deprive none of it; least of all, that some
should enjoy it at the expense of others. Equality of liberty; not to treat others as I should
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not wish them to treat me; payment of my debt to those who alone have made possible
my liberty or prosperity or enlightenment; justice, in its simplest and most universal
sense- these are the foundations of liberal morality.
Philosophers with an optimistic view of human nature and a belief in the possibility of
harmonizing interests, such as Locke, Adam Smith or Mill, believed that social harmony
and progress were compatible with reserving a large area for private life over which
neither the state nor any other authority must be allowed to trespass. Hobbes, and those
who agreed with him, especially conservative or reactionary thinkers, argued that if men
were to be prevented from destroying one another and making social life a jungle or a
wilderness, greater safeguards must be instituted to keep them in their places; he wished
correspondingly to increase the area of centralized control and decrease that of the
individual. However, both sides agreed that some portion of human existence must
remain independent of the sphere of social control. To invade that preserve, however
small, would be despotism. We must preserve a minimum area of personal freedom if we
are not to 'degrade or deny our nature'. We cannot remain absolutely free, and must give
up some of our liberty to preserve the rest. What then must the minimum be? This has
been, and perhaps always will be, a matter of infinite debate. But whatever the principle
in terms of which the area of non-interference is to be drawn, liberty in this sense means
liberty from; absence of interference beyond the shifting, but always recognizable,
frontier.
'All the errors which a man is likely to commit against advice and warning are far
outweighed by the evil of allowing others to constrain him to what they deem is good.'
The defence of liberty consists in the 'negative' goal of warding off interference. To
threaten a man with persecution unless he submits to a life in which he exercises no
choices of his goals; to block before him every door but one, (no matter how noble the
prospect upon which it opens, or how benevolent the motives of those who arrange this),
is to sin against the truth that he is a man, a being with a life of his own to live. This is
liberty, as has been conceived by liberals in the modern world.
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Freedom in this sense is not, at any rate logically, connected with democracy or self-
government. Self-government may, overall, provide a better guarantee of the preservation
of civil liberties than other regimes, and has been defended as such by libertarians. But
there is no necessary connexion between individual liberty and democratic rule. The
answer to the question 'Who governs me?' is logically distinct from the question 'How far
does the government interfere with me?' It is in this difference that the great contrast
between the two concepts of negative and positive liberty, in the end, consists." For the
'positive' sense of liberty comes to light if we try to answer the question, not 'What am I
free to do or be?' but 'By whom am I ruled?' or 'Who is to say what I am, and what I am
not, to be or do?' The connexion between democracy and individual liberty is weaker
than it seemed, to many advocates of both. The desire to be governed by myself, or at any
rate to participate in the process by which my life is to be controlled, may be as deep a
wish as that of a free area for action, and perhaps historically older. But it is not a desire
for the same thing. So different is it, indeed, as to have led in the end to the great clash of
ideologies that dominates our world. For it is this - the 'positive' conception of liberty:
freedom to - to lead one prescribed form of life - which the adherents of the 'negative'
notion represent as being, at times, no better than a specious disguise for brutal tyranny.
The 'positive' sense of the word 'liberty' derives from the wish on the part of the
individual to be his own master. I wish my life and decisions to depend on myself, not on
external forces of whatever kind. I wish to be the instrument of my own, not of other
men's, acts of will. I wish to be a subject, not an object; to be moved by reasons, by
conscious purposes, which are my own, not by causes which affect me from outside. This
is at least part of what I mean when I say that I am rational, and that it is my reason that
distinguishes me as a human being from the rest of the world. I wish, above all, to be
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conscious of myself as a thinking, willing, active being, bearing responsibility for my
choices and able to explain them by references to my own ideas and purposes. I feel free
to the degree that I believe this to be true, and enslaved to the degree that I am made to
realize that it is not.
The freedom which consists in being one's own master, and the freedom which consists
in not being prevented from choosing as I want may, on the face of it, seem concepts at
no great logical distance from each other - no more than negative and positive ways of
saying much the same thing. Yet, the 'positive' and 'negative' notions of freedom
historically developed in divergent directions not always by logically reputable steps,
until, in the end, they came into direct conflict with each other.
One way of making this clear is in terms of the independent momentum which the,
initially perhaps quite harmless, metaphor of self-mastery acquired. 'I am my own
master'; 'I am slave to no man'; but may I not be a slave to nature? May I not be a slave to
my own, uncontrolled passions? Have not men had the experience of liberating
themselves from spiritual slavery, or slavery to nature, and do they not in the course of it
become aware, on the one hand, of a self which dominates, and, on the other, of
something in them which is brought under control? This dominant self is then variously
identified with reason, with my 'higher nature', with the self which calculates and aims at
what will satisfy it in the long run, with my 'real', or 'ideal', or 'autonomous' self, or with
my self 'at its best'. This is then contrasted with irrational impulse, uncontrolled desires,
my 'lower' nature, the pursuit of immediate pleasures, my 'empirical' self, swept by every
blast of desire and passion, needing to be rigidly disciplined if it is ever to rise to the full
height of its ‘real’ nature. For example, my higher or rational self wants to live longer and
have grandchildren but my lower nature (self) wants to smoke two packs of cigarette and
have unprotected sex with many partners. If I want to be truly free (to achieve my goal)
my higher self must control my lower self.
This entity is then identified as being the 'true' self which, by imposing its collective, or
'organic', single will upon its disobedient 'members', achieves its own, and therefore their,
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'higher' freedom. (Imagine the above example for an individual applying for a community
and its leaders where some follow their leaders and others disobey.) The risks of using
organic metaphors to justify the coercion of some men by others in order to raise them to
a ‘higher’ level of freedom have often been pointed out. But what gives such plausibility
to this kind of language is that we recognize that it is possible, and at times justifiable, to
coerce men in the name of some goal (let us say, justice or public health) which they
would, if they were more enlightened, themselves pursue, but do not, because they are
blind or ignorant or corrupt. This renders it easy for me to conceive of myself as coercing
others for their own sake, in their, not my, interest. I am then claiming that I know what
they truly need better than they know it themselves. What, at most, this entails is that they
would not resist me if they were rational and as wise as I and understood their interests as
I do
The 'positive' conception of freedom as self mastery has, in fact, and as a matter of
history, of doctrine and of practice, lent itself more easily to this splitting of personality
into two: the transcendent, dominant controller, and the empirical bundle of desires and
passions to be disciplined and brought under control. It is this historical fact that has been
influential. This demonstrates that conceptions of freedom directly derive from views of
what constitutes a self, a person, and a man. Enough manipulation with the definition of
man and freedom can be made to mean whatever the manipulator wishes. Recent history
has made it only too clear that the issue is not merely academic.
In what follows, Taylor makes an attempt to resolve one of the issues that separate
'positive' and 'negative' theories of freedom, as these have been distinguished in the
previous section. There clearly are theories, widely held in liberal society, which want to
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define freedom exclusively in terms of the independence of the individual from
interference by others, be they governments, corporations or private persons; and equally
clearly these theories are challenged by those who believe that freedom resides at least in
part in collective control over the common life. We unproblematically recognise theories
descended from Rousseau and Marx as fitting in this (the latter) category.
When people attack positive theories of freedom, they generally have some Left
totalitarian theory in mind, according to which freedom resides exclusively in exercising
collective control over one's destiny in a classless society, the kind of theory which
underlies, for instance, official Communism. This view, in its extreme form, refuses to
recognise the freedoms guaranteed in other societies as genuine. The destruction of
bourgeois freedoms is no real loss of freedom, and coercion can be justified in the name
of freedom if it is needed to bring into existence the classless society in which alone men
are properly free. Men can, in short, be forced to be free.
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immediately obvious obstacles to freedom, for instance, lack of awareness, or false
consciousness, or repression, or other inner factors of this kind. It holds firmly to the
view that to speak of such inner factors as relevant to the issue about freedom, to speak
for instance of someone's being less free because of false consciousness, is to abuse
words. The only clear meaning, which can be given to freedom, is that of the absence of
external obstacles.
Now we have to examine more closely, what is at stake between the two views. The
negative theories, as we saw, want to define freedom in terms of individual independence
from others; the positive also want to identify freedom with collective self-government.
But behind this lie some deeper differences of doctrines.
Isaiah Berlin points out that negative theories are concerned with the area in which the
subject should be left without interference, whereas the positive doctrines are concerned
with who or what controls. Taylor wants to put the point behind this in a slightly different
way. Doctrines of positive freedom are concerned with a view of freedom, which
involves essentially the exercising of control over one's life. On this view, one is free
only to the extent that one has effectively determined oneself and the shape of one's life.
The concept of freedom here is an exercise-concept.
Plainly, this kind of view can't rely simply on an opportunity-concept. We can't say that
someone is free, on a self-realisation view, if he is totally unrealised, if for instance he is
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totally unaware of his potential, if fulfilling it has never even arisen as a question for him,
or if he is paralysed by the fear of breaking with some norm which he has internalised but
which does not authentically reflect him. Within this conceptual scheme, some degree of
exercise is necessary for a man to be thought free. Or if we want to think of the internal
bars to freedom as obstacles on all fours with the external ones, then being in a position
to exercise freedom, having the opportunity, involves removing the internal barriers; and
this is not possible without having to some extent realised myself. So, with the freedom
of self-realisation, having the opportunity to be free requires that I already an exercising
freedom. A pure opportunity-concept is impossible here.
There are some considerations one can put forward straight off to show that the pure
(negative) concept won't work, that there are some discriminations among motivations
which are essential to the concept of freedom as we use it. Even where we think of
freedom as the absence of external obstacles, it is not the absence of such obstacles
simply, for we make discriminations between obstacles as representing more or less
serious infringements of freedom. And we do this, because we deploy the concept against
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a background understanding that certain goals and activities are more significant than
others.
Thus we could say that my freedom is restricted if the local authority puts up a new
traffic light at an intersection close to my home; so that where previously I could cross as
I liked, consistently with avoiding collision with other cars, now I have to wait until the
light is green. In a philosophical argument, we might call this a restriction of freedom, but
not in a serious political debate. The reason is that it is too trivial, the activity and
purposes inhibited here are not significant. It is not just a matter of our having made a
trade-off, and considered that a small loss of liberty was worth fewer traffic accidents, or
less danger for the children; we are reluctant to speak here of a loss of liberty at all; what
we feel we are trading off is convenience against safety.
By contrast a law which forbids me from worshipping according to the form I believe in
is a serious blow to liberty-, even a law which tried to restrict this to certain times (as the
traffic light restricts my crossing of the intersection to certain times) would be seen as a
serious restriction. Why this difference between the two cases? Because, we have a
background understanding of some activities and goals as highly significant for human
beings and others as less so. One's religious belief is recognised, even by atheists, as
supremely important, because it is that by which the believer defines himself as a moral
being. By contrast, my rhythm of movement through the city traffic is trivial. We don't
want to speak of these two in the same way. Freedom is no longer just the absence of
external obstacle but the absence of external obstacle to significant action, to what is
important to man. There are discriminations to be made; some restrictions are more
serious than others, some are utterly trivial. Therefore, some discrimination among
motivations seems essential to our concept of freedom. A minute's reflection shows why
this must be so. Freedom is important to us because we are purposive beings. But then
there must be distinctions in the significance of different kinds of freedom based on the
distinction in the significance of different purposes.
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Although we have to admit that there are internal, motivational, necessary conditions for
freedom, we can perhaps still avoid any legitimating of second-guessing (anticipate or
predict) of the subject. If our negative theory allows for strong evaluation, allows that
some goals are really important to us, and that other desires are seen as not fully ours,
then can it not retain the thesis that freedom is being able to do what I want? That is, what
I can identify myself as wanting, where this means not just what I identify as my
strongest desire, but what I identify as my true, authentic desire or purpose. The subject
would still be the final arbiter of his being free/unfree, and we are retaining the basic
concern of the negative theory. Freedom would be modified to read: the absence of
internal or external obstacle to what I truly or authentically want.
Taylor asserted that this hybrid or middle position is untenable, where we are willing to
admit that we can speak of what we truly want, as against what we most strongly desire,
and of some desires as obstacles to our freedom, while we still will not allow for second-
guessing. For to rule this out in principle is to rule out in principle that the subject can
ever be wrong about what he truly wants. And how can he never, in principle, be wrong,
unless there is nothing to be right or wrong about in this matter?
What are internal obstacles?
Well, to resume what we have seen: our attributions of freedom make sense against a
background sense of more and less significant purposes, for the question of freedom/
unfreedom is bound up with the frustration/fulfilment of our purposes. Further, our
significant purposes can be frustrated by our own desires, and where these are sufficiently
based on misapprehension, we consider them as not really ours, and experience them as
restraints. A man's freedom can therefore, be curtailed by internal, motivational obstacles,
as well as external ones. A man who is driven by malice to jeopardise his most important
relationships, in spite of himself, or who is prevented by unreasoning fear from taking up
the career he truly wants, is not really made freer if one lifts the external obstacles to act
on his ill feeling or acting on his fear. Or at best he is liberated into a very impoverished
freedom.
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Once we see that we make distinctions of degree and significance in freedoms depending
on the significance of the purpose fettered/ enabled, how can we deny that it makes a
difference to the degree of freedom not only whether one of my basic purposes is
frustrated by my own desires but also whether I have grievously misidentified this
purpose? The only way to avoid this would be to hold that there is no such thing as
getting it wrong, that your basic purpose is just what you feel it to be. But there is such a
thing as getting it wrong, as we have seen, and the very distinctions of significance
depend on this fact.
But if this is so, then the crude negative view of freedom is untenable. Freedom can't just
be the absence of external obstacles, for there may also be internal ones. And nor may the
internal obstacles be just confined to those that the subject identifies as such, so that he is
the final arbiter; for he may be profoundly mistaken about his purposes and about what
he wants to repudiate. And if so, he is less capable of freedom in the meaningful sense of
the word. Hence we cannot maintain the incorrigibility of the subject's judgements about
his freedom, or rule out second-guessing, as we put it above. And at the same time, we
are forced to abandon the pure opportunity-concept of freedom. For freedom now
involves my being able to recognise adequately my more important purposes, and my
being able to overcome or at least neutralise my motivational fetters, as well as my being
free of external obstacles. I must be actually exercising self-understanding in order to be
truly or fully free. We can no longer understand freedom just as an opportunity-concept.
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QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION
2. Based on such identification and also Taylor’s analysis, why do you think has the
FDRE Constitution incorporated both freedoms?
4. What is negative liberty? What is positive liberty? What is the difference between the
two? Why are freedoms limited?
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CHAPTER TEN
EQUALITY
10.1 Introduction
This chapter is concerned with social and political equality which is one of the principles
of justice as indicated in chapter eight. In its prescriptive usage, ‘equality’ is a loaded and
‘highly contested’ concept. On account of its normally positive connotation is that it has a
rhetorical power rendering it suitable as a political slogan. At least since the French
Revolution, equality has served as one of the leading ideals of the body politic; in this
respect, it is at present probably the most controversial of the great social ideals. There is
controversy concerning the precise notion of equality, the relation of justice and equality
(the principles of equality), the material requirements and measure of the ideal of equality
(equality of what?), the extension of equality (equality among whom?), and its status
within a comprehensive (liberal) theory of justice (the value of equality). Each of these
five issues will be discussed in turn in the present chapter.
10.2 Objectives
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10.3 Equality: Defining the Concept
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descriptive, e.g. two people weigh the same. A prescriptive use of equality is present
when a prescriptive standard is applied, i.e., a norm or rule, e.g. people ought to be equal
before the law. The standards grounding prescriptive assertions of equality contain at
least two components. On the one hand, there is a descriptive component, since the
assertions need to contain descriptive criteria, in order to identify those people to which
the rule or norm applies. The question of this identification -- who belongs to which
category? -- may itself be normative, e.g. to whom do the Ethiopian or U.S. laws apply?
On the other hand, the comparative standards contain something normative -- a moral or
legal rule, in the example, the U.S. laws -- specifying how those falling under the norm
are to be treated. Such a rule constitutes the prescriptive component. Sociological and
economic analyses of (in-)equality mainly pose the questions of how inequalities can be
determined and measured and what their causes and effects are. In contrast, social and
political philosophy is in general concerned mainly with the following questions: what
kind of equality, if any, should be offered, and to whom and when? Such is the case in
this chapter as well.
‘Equality’ and ‘equal’ are incomplete predicates that necessarily generate one question:
equal in what respect. Equality essentially consists of a tripartite relation between two (or
several) objects or persons and one (or several) qualities. Two objects a and b are equal in
a certain respect if, in that respect, they fall under the same general terminus. ‘Equality’
denotes the relation between the objects that are compared. Every comparison presumes a
concrete attribute defining the respect in which the equality applies -- equality thus
referring to a common sharing of this comparison-determining attribute. This relevant
comparative standard represents a ‘variable’ (or ‘index’) of the concept of equality that
needs to be specified in each particular case; differing conceptions of equality here
emerge from one or another descriptive or normative moral standard. There is another
source of diversity as well: various different standards might be used to measure
inequality, with the respect in which people are compared remaining constant. The
difference between a general concept and different specific conceptions (Rawls 1971) of
equality may explain why according to various authors producing ‘equality’ has no
unified meaning -- or even is devoid of meaning.
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For this reason, it helps to think of the idea of equality or for that matter inequality,
understood as an issue of social justice, not as a single principle, but as a complex group
of principles forming the basic core of today's egalitarianism. Depending on which
procedural principle one adopts, contrary answers are forthcoming. Both equality and
inequality are complex and multifaceted concepts. In any real historical context, it is clear
that no single notion of equality can sweep the field. Many egalitarians concede that
much of our discussion of the concept is vague and theoretical. But they believe that there
is also a common underlying strain of important moral concerns implicit in it. Above all
it serves to remind us of our common humanity, despite various differences. In this sense,
egalitarians tend to think of egalitarianism as a single coherent normative doctrine -- but
one in any case embracing a variety of principles. Following the introduction of different
principles and theories of equality, we will return in the last section of this chapter to the
question of how best to define egalitarianism and the value of equality.
Equality in its prescriptive usage has, of course, a close connection with morality and
justice in general and distributive justice in particular. From antiquity onward, equality
has been considered a constitutive feature of justice. Throughout history, people and
emancipatory movements use the language of justice to denounce certain inequalities.
But what exactly is the connection between equality and justice, i.e., what kind of role
does equality play in a theory of justice? The role and correct account of equality,
understood as an issue of social justice, is itself a difficult philosophical issue but we are
already introduced to the matter through Rawls’ theory of justice. To clarify this more,
philosophers have defended a variety of principles and conceptions of equality, many of
which are mentioned in the following discussion. This section introduces four well-
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known principles of equality, ranging from highly general and uncontroversial to more
specific and controversial.
Through its connection with justice, equality, like justice itself, has different justitianda,
i.e., objects the term ‘just’ or ‘equal’ or their opposites can be applied to. These are
mainly actions, persons, social institutions, and circumstances (e.g. distributions). These
objects of justice stand in an internal connection and order that can here only be hinted at.
The predicates "just" or "unjust" are only applicable when voluntary actions implying
responsibility are in question. Justice is hence primarily related to individual actions.
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In the following sections, the objects of equality may vary from topic to topic. However,
as indicated, there is a close relationship between the objects. The next three principles of
equality hold generally and primarily for all actions and treatment of others and for
resulting circumstances. From the fourth principle onward, i.e., starting with the
presumption of equality, this section is mainly concerned with distributive justice and the
evaluation of distribution.
What is formal equality? Accordingly, when can we say people are equal and in what
respect?
When two persons have equal status in at least one normatively relevant respect, they
must be treated equally with regard to this respect. This is the generally accepted formal
equality principle that Aristotle formulated in reference to Plato: "treat like cases as like"
(Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, V.3.; Politics, III). Of course the crucial question is
which respects are normatively relevant and which are not. Some authors see this formal
principle of equality as a specific application of a rule of rationality: it is irrational,
because inconsistent, to treat equal cases unequally without sufficient reasons. But most
authors instead stress that what is here at stake is a moral principle of justice, basically
corresponding with acknowledgment of the impartial and universalizable nature of moral
judgments, namely, the postulate of formal equality demands more than consistency with
one's subjective preferences. What is more important is possible justification vis-à-vis
others of the equal or unequal treatment in question -- and this on the sole basis of a
situation's objective features.
What is proportional equality and what is its difference from formal equality?
According to Aristotle, there are two kinds of equality, numerical and proportional
(Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, cf. Plato, Laws,). A form of treatment of others or as a
result of it a distribution is equal numerically when it treats all persons as
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indistinguishable, thus treating them identically or granting them the same quantity of a
good per capita. That is not always just. In contrast, a form of treatment of others or
distribution is proportional or relatively equal when it treats all relevant persons in
relation to thei r due. Just numerical equality is a special case of proportional equality.
Numerical equality is only just under special circumstances, viz. when persons are equal
in the relevant respects so that the relevant proportions are equal. Proportional equality
further specifies formal equality; it is the more precise and detailed, hence actually the
more comprehensive formulation of formal equality. It indicates what produces an
adequate equality.
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worth -- and such inequality is apparent in both Plato and Aristotle (such as what slaves
and women deserve).
What does it mean to say human beings are morally equal? What are the grounds of
moral equality?
Until the eighteenth century, it was assumed that human beings are unequal by nature i.e.,
that there was a natural human hierarchy. This postulate collapsed with the advent of the
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idea of natural right and its assumption of an equality of natural order among all human
beings. Against Plato and Aristotle, the classical formula for justice according to which
an action is just when it offers each individual his or her due took on a substantively
egalitarian meaning in the course of time, viz. everyone deserved the same dignity and
the same respect. This is now the widely held conception of substantive, universal, moral
equality. It developed among the Stoics, who emphasized the natural equality of all
rational beings, and in early New Testament Christianity, which elevated the equality of
human beings before God to a principle: one to be sure not always adhered to later by the
Christian church. This important idea was also taken up both in the Talmud and in Islam,
where it was grounded in both Greek and Hebraic elements in both systems. In the
modern period, starting in the seventeenth century, the dominant idea was of natural
equality in the tradition of natural law and social contract theory. Hobbes (1651)
postulated that in their natural condition, individuals possess equal rights, because over
time they have the same capacity to do each other harm. Locke (1690) argued that all
human beings have the same natural right to both (self-) ownership and freedom.
Rousseau (1755) declared social inequality to be a virtually primeval decline of the
human race from natural equality in a harmonious state of nature: a decline catalyzed by
the human urge for perfection, property and possessions. For Rousseau (1755, 1762), the
resulting inequality and rule of violence can only be overcome by tying unfettered
subjectivity to a common civil existence and popular sovereignty. In Kant's moral
philosophy (1785), the categorical imperative formulates the equality postulate of
universal human worth. His transcendental and philosophical reflections on autonomy
and self-legislation led to a recognition of the same freedom for all rational beings as the
sole principle of human rights. Such Enlightenment ideas stimulated the great modern
social movements and revolutions, and were taken up in modern constitutions and
declarations of human rights. During the French Revolution, equality -- along with
freedom and fraternity -- became a basis of the Déclaration des droits de l´homme et du
citoyen of 1789.
The principle of equal dignity and respect is now accepted as a minimum standard
throughout mainstream Western culture. Some misunderstandings regarding moral
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equality need to be clarified. To say that men are equal is not to say they are identical.
The postulate of equality implies that underneath apparent differences, certain
recognizable entities or units exist that, by dint of being units, can be said to be ‘equal.’
Fundamental equality means that persons are alike in important relevant and specified
respects alone, and not that they are all generally the same or can be treated in the same
way. In a now commonly posed distinction, stemming from Dworkin, moral equality can
be understood as prescribing treatment of persons as equals, i.e., with equal concern and
respect, and not the often implausible principle of treating persons equally. This
fundamental idea of equal respect for all persons and of the equal worth or equal dignity
of all human beings is accepted as a minimal standard by all leading schools of modern
Western political and moral culture. Any political theory abandoning this notion of
equality will not be found plausible today. In a period in which metaphysical, religious
and traditional views have lost their general plausibility, it appears impossible to
peacefully reach a general agreement on common political aims without accepting that
persons must be treated as equals. As a result, moral equality constitutes the ‘egalitarian
plateau’ for all contemporary political theories (Kymlicka 1990).
To recognize that human beings are all equally individuals does not mean having to treat
them uniformly in any respects other than those in which they clearly have a moral claim
to be treated alike. Disputes arise, of course, concerning what these claims amount to and
how they should be resolved. That is the crux of the problem to which we now turn.
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1990). With this we finally switch the object of equality from treatment to the fair
distribution of goods and ills or bads.
The presumption in favour of equality can be justified by the principle of equal respect
together with the requirement of universal and reciprocal justification; that requirement is
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linked to the morality of equal respect granting each individual equal consideration in
every justification and distribution. Every sort of public, political distribution is, in this
view, to be justified to all relevantly concerned persons, such that they could in principle
agree. Since it is immoral to force someone to do something of which he or she does not
approve, only reasons acceptable to the other person can give one the moral right to treat
the person in accordance with these reasons. The impartial justification of norms rests on
the reciprocity and universality of the reasons. Universal norms and rights enforced
through inner or external sanctions are morally justified only if, on the one hand, they can
be reciprocally justified, i.e., if one person asks no more of the other than what he or she
is willing to give (reciprocity), and if, on the other hand, they are justified with respect to
the interests of all concerned parties, i.e., if everyone has good reasons for accepting them
and no one has a good reason for rejecting them (universality). In the end, only the
concerned parties can themselves formulate and advocate their (true) interests. Equal
respect, which we reciprocally owe to one another, thus requires respect for the
autonomous decisions of each non-interchangeable individual.
This procedural approach to moral legitimation sees the autonomy of the individual as the
standard of justification for universal rules, norms, rights etc. Only those rules can be
considered legitimate to which all concerned parties can freely agree on the basis of
universal, discursively applicable, commonly shared reasons. Equal consideration is thus
accorded to all persons and their interests. In a public distribution anyone who claims
more owes all others an adequate universal and reciprocal justification. If this cannot be
provided, i.e., if there is no reason for unequal distribution that can be universally and
reciprocally recognized by all (since, lets assume, all are by and large equally productive
and needy), then equal distribution is the only legitimate distribution. How could it be
otherwise? Any unequal distribution would mean that someone receives less, and another
more. Whoever receives less can justifiably demand a reason for he or she being
disadvantaged. Yet there is no such justification. Hence, any unequal distribution is
illegitimate in this case. If no convincing reasons for unequal distribution can be brought
forward, there remains only the option of equal distribution. Equal distribution is
therefore not merely one among many alternatives, but rather the inevitable starting point
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that must be assumed insofar as one takes the justificatory claims of all to be of equal
weight.
• What goods and burdens are to be justly distributed (or should be distributed)?
Which social goods comprise the object of distributive justice?
• What are the spheres (of justice) into which these resources have to be grouped?
• Who are the recipients of distribution? Who has a prima facie claim to a fair
share?
• What are the commonly cited yet in reality unjustified exceptions to equal
distribution?
• Which inequalities are justified?
• Which approach, conception or theory of egalitarian distributive justice is
therefore the best?
• What goods and burdens are to be justly distributed (or should be distributed)?
There are various opinions as to which social goods comprise the object of
distributive justice.
• Does distributive justice apply only to those goods commonly produced, i.e.,
through social and economic fair cooperation, or to other goods as well, e.g.
natural resources that are not the result of common cooperation? (At present, the
former approach is most apparent in Rawls (1971) and many of his adherents and
critics follow Rawls in this respect.)
In the domain of public political distribution, the goods and burdens to be distributed may
be divided into various categories. Such a division is essential because reasons that speak
for unequal treatment in one area do not justify unequal treatment in another. What are
the spheres (of justice) into which these resources have to be grouped? In order to
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reconstruct our understanding of contemporary liberal, democratic welfare states, four
categories seem essential: 1. Civil liberties 2. Opportunities for political participation 3.
Social positions and opportunities 4. Economic rewards. Despite views to the contrary,
liberties and opportunities are seen in this view as objects of distribution. For all four
categories, the presumption of equality is the guiding principle. The results of applying
the presumption to each category can then be codified as rights.
After dividing social goods into categories, we must next ask what can justify unequal
treatment or unequal distribution in each category. Today the following postulates of
equality are generally considered morally required.
Strict equality is called for in the legal sphere of civil freedoms, since -- putting aside
limitation on freedom as punishment -- there is no justification for any exceptions. As
follows from the principle of formal equality, all citizens of a society must have equal
general rights and duties. These rights and duties have to be grounded in general laws
applying to everyone. This is the postulate of legal equality. In addition, the postulate of
equal freedom is equally valid: every person should have the same freedom to structure
his or her life, and this in the most far-reaching manner possible in a peaceful and
appropriate social order.
In the political sphere, the possibilities for political participation should be equally
distributed. All citizens have the same claim to participation in forming public opinion,
and in the distribution, control, and exercise of political power. This is the postulate --
requiring equal opportunity -- of equal political power sharing. To ensure equal
opportunity, social institutions have to be designed in such a way that persons who are
disadvantaged, e.g. have a stutter or a low income, have an equal chance to make their
views known and to participate fully in the democratic process.
In the social sphere, social positions equally gifted and motivated citizens must have
approximately the same chances at offices and positions, independent of their economic
or social class and native endowments. This is the postulate of fair equality of social
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opportunity. An unequal outcome has to result from equality of chances at a position, i.e.,
qualifications alone counting, not social background or influences of milieu.
Since the nineteenth century, the political debate has increasingly centered on the
question of economic and social inequality (this running alongside the question of --
gradually achieved -- equal rights to freedom and political participation). The main
controversy here is whether, and if so to what extent, the state should establish far-
reaching equality of social conditions for all through political measures such as
redistribution of income and property, tax reform, a more equal educational system,
social insurance, and positive discrimination.
The equality required in the economic sphere is complex, taking account of several
positions that -- each according to the presumption of equality -- justify a turn away from
equality. A salient problem here is what constitutes justified exceptions to equal
distribution of goods -- the main sub field in the debate over adequate conceptions of
distributive equality and its currency. The following sorts of factors are usually
considered eligible for justified unequal treatment: (a) need or differing natural
disadvantages (e.g. disabilities); (b) existing rights or claims (e.g. private property); (c)
differences in the performance of special services (e.g. desert, efforts, or sacrifices); (d)
efficiency; and (e) compensation for direct and indirect or structural discrimination (e.g.
affirmative action).
These factors play an essential, albeit varied, role in the following alternative egalitarian
theories of distributive justice. The following theories offer different accounts of what
should be equalized in the economic sphere. Most can be understood as applications of
the presumption of equality (whether they explicitly acknowledge it or not); only a few
(like strict equality, libertarianism, and sufficiency) are alternatives to the presumption.
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10.5 Conceptions of Distributive Equality: Equality of What?
What should be equalised? What are the arguments of the following seven
conceptions of distributive equality? What are the objections to such arguments, if
any?
What are the objections to equality and on what grounds?
Every effort to interpret the concept of equality and to apply the principles of equality
mentioned above demands a precise measure of the parameters of equality. We need to
know the dimensions within which striving for equality is morally relevant. What follows
is a brief review of the seven most prominent conceptions of distributive equality, each
offering a different answer to one question: in the field of distributive justice, what
should be equalized, or what should be the parameter or "currency" of equality?
Simple equality, meaning everyone being furnished with the same material level of goods
and services, represents a strict position as far as distributive justice is concerned. It is
generally rejected as untenable.
Hence, with the possible exception of Barbeuf (1796), no prominent author or movement
has demanded strict equality. Since egalitarianism has come to be widely associated with
the demand for economic equality and this in turn with communistic or socialistic ideas,
it is important to stress that neither communism nor socialism -- despite their protest
against poverty and exploitation and their demand for social security for all citizens --
calls for absolute economic equality. The orthodox Marxist view of economic equality
was expounded in the Critique of the Gotha Program (1875). Marx here rejects the idea
of legal equality, on three grounds. In the first place, he indicates, equality draws on a
merely limited number of morally relevant vantages and neglects others, thus having
unequal effects; right can never be higher than the economic structure and cultural
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development of the society it conditions. In the second place, theories of justice have
concentrated excessively on distribution instead of the basic questions of production. In
the third place, a future communist society needs no law and no justice, since social
conflicts will have vanished.
As an idea, simple equality fails because of problems that are raised regards to equality in
general. It is useful to review these problems, as they require resolution in any plausible
approach to equality.
(i) We need adequate indices for the measurement of the equality of the goods to
be distributed. Through what concepts should equality and inequality be
understood? It is thus clear that equality of material goods can lead to unequal
satisfaction. Money constitutes a usual-index -- although an inadequate one; at
the very least, equal opportunity has to be conceived in other terms.
(ii) The time span needs to be indicated for realizing the desired model of equal
distribution. Should we seek to equalize the goods in question over complete
individual lifetimes, or should we seek to ensure that various life segments are
as equally well off as possible?
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corresponding costs. A change thus becomes desirable when the winners in
such a change could compensate the losers for their losses and still retain a
substantial profit. In contrast to the Pareto-criterion, the Kaldor-Hicks
criterion contains a compensation rule. For purposes of economic analysis,
such theoretical models of optimal efficiency make a great deal of sense.
However, the analysis is always made relative to starting situation that can be
unjust and unequal. A society can thus be (close to) pareto-optimality -- i.e.,
no one can increase his or her material goods or freedoms without diminishing
those of someone else -- while also displaying enormous inequalities in the
distribution of the same goods and freedoms. For this reason, egalitarians
claim that it may be necessary to reduce pareto-optimality for the sake of
justice if there is no more egalitarian distribution that is also pareto-optimal.
In the eyes of their critics, equality of whatever kind should not lead to some
people having to do with less even, though this equalizing down does not
benefit any of those who are in a worse position.
(iv) Moral objections: A strict and mechanical equal distribution between all
individuals does not sufficiently take into account the differences among
individuals and their situations. In essence, since individuals desire different
things, why should everyone receive the same? Intuitively, for example, we
can recognize that a sick person has other claims than a healthy person, and
furnishing each with the same things would be mistaken. With simple
equality, personal freedoms are unacceptably limited and distinctive
individual qualities insufficiently regarded; in this manner they are in fact
unequally regarded. Furthermore, persons not only have a moral right to their
own needs being considered, but a right and a duty to take responsibility for
their own decisions and their consequences. Working against the identification
of distributive justice with simple equality, a basic postulate of virtually all
present-day egalitarians is as follows: human beings are themselves
responsible for certain inequalities resulting from their free decisions; aside
from minimum aid in emergencies, they deserve no recompense for such
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inequalities. On the other hand, there are due compensations for inequalities
that are not the result of self-chosen options. For egalitarians, the world is
morally better when equality of life conditions prevail. This is an amorphous
ideal demanding further clarification. Why is such equality an ideal, and
equality of what, precisely? By the same token, most egalitarians presently do
not advocate an equality of outcome, but different kinds of equality of
opportunity, due to their emphasis on a pair of morally central points: firstly,
that individuals have responsibility for their decisions; and secondly, that the
only things to be considered objects of equality are things serving the real
interests of individuals. The opportunities to be equalized between people can
be opportunities for well being (i.e. objective welfare), or for preference
satisfaction (i.e., subjective welfare), or for resources. It is not equality of
objective or subjective well being or resources themselves that should be
equalized, but an equal opportunity to gain the well-being or resources one
aspires to. Such equality of opportunity (to well-being or resources) depends
on the presence of a realm of options for each individual equal to the options
enjoyed by all other persons, in the sense of the same prospects for fulfilment
of preferences or the possession of resources. The opportunity must consist of
possibilities one can really take advantage of. Equal opportunity prevails
when human beings effectively enjoy equal realms of possibility.
(v) Simple equality is very often associated with equality of results (although
these are two distinct concepts). However, to strive only for equality of results
is problematic. To illustrate the point, let us briefly limit the discussion to a
single action and the event or state of affairs resulting from it. Arguably,
actions should not be judge d solely by the moral quality of their results as
important as this may be. One also has to take into consideration the way in
which the events or circumstances to be evaluated have come about. Generally
speaking, a moral judgment requires not only the assessment of the results of
the action in question (the consequentialist aspect) but, first and foremost, the
assessment of the intention of the actor (the deontological aspect). The source
and its moral quality influence the moral judgment of the results. For example,
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if you strike me, your blow will hurt me; the pain I feel may be considered
bad in itself, but the moral status of your blow will also depend on whether
you were (morally) allowed such a gesture (perhaps through parental status,
although that is controversial) or even obliged to execute it (e.g. as a police
officer preventing me from doing harm to others), or whether it was in fact
prohibited but not prevented. What is true of individual actions (or their
omission) has to be true mutatis mutandis of social institutions and
circumstances like distributions resulting from collective social actions (or
their omission). Hence, social institutions are to be assessed not solely on the
basis of information about how they affect individual quality of life. A society
in which people starve on the streets is certainly marked by inequality;
nevertheless, its moral quality, i.e., whether the society is just or unjust with
regard to this problem, also depends on the suffering's caused. Does the
society allow starvation as an unintended but tolerable side effect of what its
members see as a just distributive scheme? Indeed, does it even defend the
suffering as a necessary means, e.g. as a sort of Social Darwinism? Or has the
society taken measures against starvation, which have turned out insufficient?
In the latter case, whether the society has taken such steps for reasons of
political morality or efficiency again makes a moral difference. Hence, even
for egalitarians, equality of results is too narrow and one-sided a focus.
(vi) Finally, there is a danger of (strict) equality leading to uniformity, rather than
to a respect for pluralism and democracy. In the contemporary debate, this
complaint has been mainly articulated in feminist and multiculturalist theory.
A central tenet of feminist theory is that gender has been and remains a
historical variable and internally differentiated relation of domination. The
same holds for so called racial and ethnic differences. These differences are
often still conceived of as marking different values. The different groups
involved here rightly object to their discrimination, marginalization, and
domination, and an appeal to equality of status thus seems a solution.
However, as feminists and multiculturalists have pointed out, equality, as
usually understood and practiced, is constituted in part by a denial and ranking
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of differences; as a result it seems less useful as an antidote to relations of
domination. "Equality" can often mean the assimilation to a pre-existing and
problematic ‘male’ or ‘white’ or ‘middle class’ norm. In short, domination
and a fortiori inequality often arise out of an inability to appreciate and
nurture differences -- not out of a failure to see everyone as the same. To
recognize these differences should however not lead to an essentialism
grounded in sexual or cultural characteristics. In contemporary
multiculturalism and feminism, there is a crucial debate between those who
insist that sexual, racial, and ethnic differences should become irrelevant, on
the one hand, and those believing that such differences, even though culturally
relevant, should not furnish a basis for inequality: that rather one should find
mechanisms for securing equality, despite valued differences. Neither of these
strategies involves rejecting equality. Rather, the dispute is about how equality
is to be attained (McKinnon 1989, Taylor 1992).
Proposing a connection between equality and pluralism, Michael Walzer's theory (1983)
aims at what he calls "complex equality". According to Walzer, relevant reasons can only
speak in favour of distribution of specific types of goods in specific spheres -- not in
several or all spheres. Against a theory of simple equality promoting equal distribution of
dominant goods, hence underestimating the complexity of the criteria at work in each
given sphere the dominance of particular goods needs to be ended. For instance, the
purchasing power in the political sphere through means derived from the economic
sphere (i.e., money) needs to be prevented. Actually, Walzer's theory of complex equality
is not aimed at equality but at the separation of spheres of justice, the theory's designation
thus being misleading. Any theory of equality should however follow Walzer's advice not
to be monistic but recognize the complexity of life and the plurality of criteria for justice.
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10.5.2 Libertarianism
212
In any event, with a shift away from a strictly negative idea of freedom, economic
liberalism can indeed itself point the way to more social and economic equality. For with
such a shift, what is at stake is not only assuring an equal right to self-defense, but also
furnishing everyone more or less the same chance to actually make use of the right to
freedom. In other words, certain basic goods need to be furnished to assure the equitable
or ‘fair value of the basic liberties’ (Rawls).
10.5.3 Utilitarianism
In line with Rawls, many hold that justice entails no value to interests insofar as they
conflict with justice. According to this view, unjustified preferences will not distort
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mutual claims people have on each other. Equal treatment has to consist of everyone
being able to claim a fair portion, and not in all interests having the same weight in
disposal over my portion. Utilitarians cannot admit any restrictions on interests based on
morals or justice. As long as utilitarian theory lacks a concept of justice and fair
allotment, it must fail in its goal of treating all as equals. As Rawls also famously argues,
utilitarianism that involves neglecting the separateness of persons does not contain a
proper interpretation of moral equality as equal respect for each individual.
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10.5.5 Equality of Resources
Represented above all by both Rawls (also refer back to ch.8) and Dworkin, resource
equality avoids such problems (Rawls 1971; Dworkin 1981). It holds individuals
responsible for their decisions and actions, not, however, for circumstances beyond their
control -- race, sex, and skin-colour, but also intelligence and social position -- which
thus are excluded as distributive criteria. Equal opportunity is insufficient because it does
not compensate for unequal innate gifts. What applies for social circumstances should
also apply for such gifts, both these factors being purely arbitrary from a moral point of
view and requiring adjustment.
According to Rawls, human beings should have the same initial expectations of "basic
goods," i.e., all-purpose goods; this in no way precludes ending up with different
quantities of such goods or resources, as a result of personal economic decisions and
actions. When prime importance is accorded an assurance of equal basic freedoms and
rights, inequalities are just when they fulfil two provisos. On the one hand, they have to
be linked to offices and positions open to everyone under conditions of fair equality of
opportunity; on the other hand, they have to reflect the famous ‘difference principle’ in
offering the greatest possible advantage to the least advantaged members of society.
Otherwise, the economic order requires revision. Due to the argument of the moral
arbitrariness of talents, the commonly accepted criteria for merit (like productivity,
working hours, effort) are clearly relativized. The difference principle only allows the
talented to earn more to the extent this raises the lowest incomes. According to Rawls,
with regard to the basic structure of society, the difference principle should be opted for
under a self-chosen "veil of ignorance" regarding personal and historical circumstances
and similar factors. The principle offers a general assurance of not totally succumbing to
the hazards of a free market situation; and everyone does better than with inevitably
inefficient total equal distribution, whose level of well-being is below that of those worse
off under the difference principle.
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Since Rawls' Theory of Justice is the classical focal point of present-day political
philosophy, it is worth noting the different ways his theory claims to be egalitarian: First,
Rawls upholds a natural basis for equal human worth: a minimal capacity for having a
conception of the good and a sense of justice. Second, through the device of the "veil of
ignorance," people are conceived as equals in the "original position." Third, the idea of
sharing this "original position" presupposes the parties having political equality, as equal
participants in the process of choosing the principles by which they would be governed.
Fourth, Rawls proposes fair equality of opportunity. Fifth, Rawls maintains that all desert
must be institutionally defined, depending on the goals of the society. No one deserves
his or her talents or circumstances -- all products of the natural lottery. Finally, the
difference principle tends toward equalizing holdings.
In the free market, how the distribution then develops depends on an individual's
ambitions. The inequalities that thus emerge are justified, since one has to take
responsibility for one's "option luck" in the realm of personal responsibility. In contrast,
unjustified inequalities based on different innate provisions and gifts as well as brute luck
should be compensated for through a fictive differentiated insurance system: its
premiums are established behind Dworkin's own ‘veil of ignorance,’ in order to then be
distributed in real life to everyone and collected in taxes. For Dworkin, this is the key to
the natural lottery being balanced fairly, preventing a "slavery of the talented" through
excessive redistribution.
216
Objections to all versions of "brute-luck egalitarianism" come from two sides. Some
authors criticize its, in their view, unjustified or excessively radical rejection of merit:
The egalitarian thesis of desert only being justifiably acknowledged if it involves desert
"all the way down" not only destroys the classical, everyday principle of desert, since
everything has a basis that we ourselves have not created. In the eyes of such critics,
along with the merit-principle this argument also destroys our personal identity, since we
can no longer accredit ourselves with our own capacities and accomplishments. Other
authors consider the criterion for responsibility to be too strong, indeed inhuman in its
consequences, since human beings responsible for their own misery would be left alone
with their misery (Anderson 1999).
217
G.A. Cohen's (1989) broader conception of equality of access to advantage attempts to
link and integrate the perspectives of welfare equality and resource equality through the
overriding concept of advantage. For Cohen, there are two grounds for egalitarian
compensation. Egalitarians will be moved to furnish a paralyzed person with a
compensatory wheelchair independently of the person's welfare level. This egalitarian
response to disability overrides equality of (opportunity to) welfare. Egalitarians also
favour compensation for phenomena such as pain, independent of any loss of capacity --
for instance by paying for expensive medicine. But, Cohen claims, any justification for
such compensation has to invoke the idea of equality of opportunity to welfare. He thus
views both aspects, resources and welfare, as necessary and irreducible. Much of
Roemer's (1998) more technical argument is devoted to constructing the scale to calibrate
the extent to which something is the result of circumstances. An incurred adverse
consequence is the result of circumstances, not choice, precisely to the extent that it is a
consequence that persons of one or another specific type can be expected to incur.
Theories that limit themselves to the equal distribution of basic means -- this in the hope
of doing justice to the different goals of all human beings -- are often criticized as
fetishistic, in that they focus on means, rather than on what individuals gain with these
means (Sen 1980), For the value goods have for someone depends on objective
possibilities, the natural environment, and individual capacities. Hence, in contrast to the
resourcist approach, Amartya Sen proposes orientating distribution around "capabilities
to achieve functionings," i.e., the various things that a person manages to do or be in
leading a life (Sen 1992). In other words, evaluating individual well-being has to be tied
to a capability for achieving and maintaining various precious conditions and
"functionings" constitutive of a person's being, such as adequate nourishment, good
health, the ability to move about freely or to appear in public without shame, and so forth.
Also important here is the real freedom to acquire well-being -- a freedom represented in
the capability to oneself choose forms of achievement and the combination of
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"functionings." For Sen, capabilities are thus the measure of an equality of capabilities
human beings enjoy to lead their lives. A problem consistently raised with capability
approaches is the ability to weigh capabilities in order to arrive at a metric for equality.
The problem is intensified by the fact that various moral perspectives are comprised in
the concept of capability. Martha Nussbaum (1992, 2000) has linked the capability
approach to an Aristotelian, essentialistic, "thick" theory of the good -- a theory meant to
be, as she puts it, "vague," incomplete, and open-ended enough to leave place for
individuality and cultural variations. On the basis of such a "thick" conception of
necessary and universal elements of a good life, certain capabilities and functionings can
be designated as foundational. In this manner, Nussbaum can endow the capability
approach with a precision that furnishes an index of interpersonal comparison, but at
some risk: that of not being neutral enough regarding the plurality of personal
conceptions of the good, a neutrality normally required by most liberals (most
importantly Rawls 1993).
Justice is primarily related to individual actions. Individual persons are the primary
bearers of responsibility (the key principle of ethical individualism). This raises two
controversial issues in the contemporary debate.
One could regard the norms of distributive equality as applying to groups rather than
individuals. It is often groups that rightfully raise the issue of an inequality between
themselves and the rest of society -- e.g. women; racial and ethnic groups. The question
arises of whether inequality among such groups should be considered morally
objectionable in itself, or whether even in the case of groups, the underlying concern
should be how individuals (as members of such groups) fare in comparative terms.
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Do the norms of distributive equality (whatever they are) apply to all individuals,
regardless of where (and when) they live? Or rather, do they only hold for members of
communities within states and nations? Most theories of equality deal exclusively with
distributive equality among people in a single society. But there does not seem to be any
rationale for that limitation. Can the group of the entitled be restricted prior to the
examination of concrete claims? Many theories seem to imply this when they connect
distributive justice or the goods to be distributed with social cooperation or production.
Those who contribute nothing to cooperation, such as the disabled, children, or future
generations, would have to be denied a claim to a fair share. The circle of persons who
are to be the recipients of distribution would thus be restricted from the outset. Other
theories are less restrictive, insofar as they do not link distribution to actual social
collaboration, yet nonetheless do restrict it, insofar as they bind it to the status of
citizenship. In this view, distributive justice is limited to the individuals within a society.
Those outside the community have no entitlement to social justice. Unequal distribution
among states and the social situations of people outside the particular society could not,
in this view, be a problem of social distributive justice. Yet here too, the universal
morality of equal respect and the principle of equal distribution demand that we consider
each person as prima facie equally entitled to the goods, unless reasons for an unequal
distribution can be put forth. It may be that in the process of justification, reasons will
emerge for privileging those who were particularly involved in the production of a good.
But prima facie, there is no reason to exclude from the outset other persons, e.g. those
from other countries, from the process of distribution and justification. That may seem
most intuitively plausible in the case of natural resources (e.g. oil) that someone
discovers by chance on or beneath the surface of his or her property. Why should such
resources belong to the person who discovers them, or on whose property they are
located? Nevertheless, in the eyes of many if not most people, global justice, i.e.,
extending distributive justice globally, demands too much from individuals and their
states. The charge, open, of course, to challenge, is one of excessive demands being
made.
220
10.7 The Value of Equality: Why Equality?
Does equality play a major role in a theory of justice, and if so, what is this role?
221
consisting of both blind and seeing persons, those with sight were rendered blind because
the blind could not be offered sight? That would in fact be morally perverse. Doing away
with inequality by bringing everyone down contains -- so the objection -- nothing good.
Such leveling-down objections would of course only be valid if there were indeed no
better and equally egalitarian alternatives available; and nearly always there are such: e.g.
those who can see should have to help the blind, financially or otherwise. In case there
are no alternatives, in order to avoid such objections, intrinsic egalitarianism cannot be
strict, but needs to be pluralistic. Then intrinsic egalitarians could say there is something
good about the change, namely greater equality -- although they would concede that
much is bad about it. Pluralistic egalitarians do not have equality as their only goal; they
also admit other values and principles -- above all the principle of welfare, according to
which it is better when people are doing better. In addition, pluralistic egalitarianism
should be moderate enough to not always grant equality victory in the case of conflict
between equality and welfare. Instead, it needs to be able to accept reductions in equality
for the sake of a higher quality of life for all (as e.g. with Rawls' difference principle).
At present, many egalitarians are ready to concede that equality in the sense of equality of
life circumstances has no compelling value in itself; but that, in a framework of liberal
concepts of justice, its meaning emerges in pursuit of other ideals: universal freedom, full
development of human capacities and the human personality, the mitigation of suffering
and defeat of domination and stigmatization, the stable coherence of modern, freely
constituted societies, and so forth. For those who are worse off, unequal circumstances
often mean considerable (relative) disadvantages and many (absolute) evils; and as a rule
these (relative) disadvantages and (absolute) evils are the source for our moral
condemnation of unequal circumstances. But this does not mean that inequality as such is
an evil. Hence, the argument goes, fundamental moral ideals other than equality stand
behind our aspiring for equality. When we are against inequality on such grounds, we are
for equality either as a by product or as a means and not as a goal or intrinsic value. In its
treatment of equality as a derived virtue, the sort of egalitarianism -- if the term is
actually suitable -- here at play is instrumental.
222
As indicated, there is also a third, more suitable approach to the equality ideal: a
constitutive egalitarianism. According to this approach, we aspire to equality on other
moral grounds -- namely, because certain inequalities are unjust. Equality has value, but
this is an extrinsic value, since it derives from another, higher moral principle of equal
dignity and respect. But it is not instrumental for this reason, i.e., it is not only valued on
account of moral equality, but also on its own account. Equality stands in relation to
justice, as does a part to a whole. The requirement of justification is based on moral
equality; and in certain contexts, successful justification leads to the above-named
principles of equality, i.e., formal, proportional equality and the presumption of equality.
Thus according to constitutive egalitarianism, these principles and the resulting equality
are justified and required by justice, and by the same token constitute social justice. We
should further distinguish two levels of egalitarianism and non-egalitarianism,
respectively.
On a first level, a constitutive egalitarian presumes that every explication of the moral
standpoint is incomplete without terms such as ‘equal,’ ‘similarly,’ etc. In contrast, a non-
egalitarianism operating on the same level considers such terms misplaced or redundant.
On a second level, when it comes to concretizing and specifying conceptions of justice, a
constitutive egalitarian gives equality substantive weight. On this level, we can find more
and less egalitarian positions according to the chosen currency of equality (the criteria by
which just equality is measured) and according to the reasons for unequal distributions
(exemptions of the presumption of equality) the respective theories regard as well
grounded. Egalitarianism on the second level thus relates to the kind, quality and quantity
of things to be equalized. Because of such variables, a clear-cut definition of second level
egalitarianism cannot be formulated. In contrast, non-egalitarians on this second level
advocate a non-relational entitlement theory of justice.
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from the right side of the political spectrum, thus arguing in general against "patterned
principles of justice", the critique's newer version also often can be heard in liberal
circles. This first-level critique of equality poses the basic question of why justice should
in fact be conceived relationally and (what is here the same) comparatively. Referring
back to Joel Feinberg's (1974) distinction between comparative and non-comparative
justice, non-egalitarians object to the moral requirement to treat people as equals and
many demands for justice emerging from it. They argue that neither the postulate nor
these demands involve comparative principles -- let alone any equality principles. They
reproach first-level egalitarians for confusion between "equality" and "universals." As the
non-egalitarians see things, within many principles of justice -- at least the especially
important ones -- the equality-terminology is redundant. Equality is thus merely a by
product of the general fulfilment of actually non-comparative standards of justice:
something obscured through the unnecessary inserting of an expression of equality. At
least the central standards of dignified human life are not relational but "absolute." As
Harry Frankfurt puts it: "It is whether people have good lives, and not how their lives
compare with the lives of others." And again: "The fundamental error of egalitarianism
lies in supposing that it is morally important whether one person has less than another
regardless of how much either of them has."
From the non-egalitarian vantage, what is really at stake in helping those worse off and
improving their lot is humanitarian concern, a desire to alleviate suffering. Such concern
is understood as not egalitarian. It is not centred on the difference between those better
off and those worse off as such (whatever the applied standard), but on improving the
situation of persons in bad circumstances. Their distress constitutes the actual moral
foundation. The wealth of those better off only furnishes a means that has to be
transferred for the sake of mitigating the distress, as long as other, morally negative
consequences do not emerge in the process. The strength of the impetus for more equality
lies in the urgency of the claims of those worse off, not in the extent of the inequality. For
this reason, instead of equality the non-egalitarian critics favor one or another entitlement
theory of justice, such as Nozick's (1974) libertarianism (cf. 10.4.2. above) and
Frankfurt's (1987) doctrine of sufficiency, according to which "What is important from
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the moral point of view is not that everyone should have the same but that each should
have enough. If everyone had enough, it would be of no moral consequence whether
some had more than others." Parfit's (1997) priority view accordingly calls for focus on
improving the situation of society's weaker and poorer members and indeed all the more
urgently the worse off they are, even if they can be less helped than others in the process.
In any case, entitlement-based non-egalitarian arguments can result in praxis in an
equality of outcome as far-reaching as egalitarian theories. Hence fulfilling an absolute or
non-comparative standard for everyone (e.g. to the effect that nobody should starve)
frequently results in a certain equality of outcome, such a standard comprising not only a
decent living but a good life. Consequently, the debate here centres on the basis -- is it
equality or something else? And not so much on the outcome -- are persons or groups
more or less equal, according to a chosen metric? Possibly, the difference is even deeper,
lying in the conception of morality in general, rather than in equality at all.
Egalitarians can respond to the anti-egalitarian critique by conceding that it is the nature
of some (if certainly far from all) essential norms of morality and justice to be concerned
primarily with the adequate fulfilment of the separate claims of individuals. However,
whether a claim can itself be considered suitable can be ascertained only by asking
whether it can be agreed on by all those affected in hypothetical conditions of freedom
and equality. This justificatory procedure is all the more needed the less evident -- indeed
the more unclear or controversial -- it is if what is at stake is actually suffering, distress,
an objective need. In the view of the constitutive egalitarians, all the judgments of
distributive justice should be approached relationally by asking which distributive
scheme all concerned parties can universally and reciprocally agree to. As described at
some length in the pertinent section above, many egalitarians argue that a presumption in
favor of equality follows from this justification requirement. In the eyes of such
egalitarians, this is all one needs for the justification and determination of the constitutive
value of equality.
Secondly, even if -- for the sake of argument -- the question is left open of whether
demands for distribution according to objective needs (e.g. alleviating hunger) involve
225
non-comparative entitlement-claims, it is nonetheless always necessary to resolve the
question of what we do owe needy individuals. This is tied in a basic way to the question
of what we owe persons in comparable or worse situations, and how we need to invest
our scarce resources (money, goods, time, energy) in light of the sum total of our
obligations. While the claim on our help may well appear non-relational, determining the
kind and extent of the help must always be relational -- at least in circumstances of
scarcity (and resources are always scarce).
Claims are either "satiable" i.e., an upper limit or sufficiency level can be indicated after
which each person's claim to X has been fulfilled, or they are not so. For insatiable
claims, to stipulate any level at which one is or ought to be sufficiently satisfied is
arbitrary. If the standards of sufficiency are defined as a bare minimum, why should
persons be content with that minimum? Why should the manner in which welfare and
resources are distributed above the poverty level not also be a question of justice? If, by
contrast, we are concerned solely with claims that are in principle "satiable," such claims
having a reasonable definition of sufficiency, then these standards of sufficiency will
most likely be very high. In Frankfurt's definition, for example, sufficiency is reached
only when persons are satisfied and no longer actively strive for more. Since we find
ourselves operating, in practice, in circumstances far beneath such a high sufficiency
level, we (of course) live in (moderate) scarcity. Then the above mentioned argument
holds as well -- namely, that in order to determine to what extent it is to be fulfilled, each
claim has to be judged in relation to the claims of all others and all available resources. In
addition, the moral urgency of lifting people above dire poverty cannot be invoked to
demonstrate the moral urgency of everyone having enough. In both forms of scarcity, i.e.,
with satiable and insatiable claims, the social right or claim to goods cannot be conceived
as something absolute or non-comparative. Egalitarians may thus conclude that
distributive justice is always comparative. This would suggest that distributive equality,
especially equality of life-conditions, is due a fundamental role in an adequate theory of
justice in particular and of morality in general.
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Questions For Discussion
1. Why should society be concerned about equality? Analyse the main arguments for
and against equality.
2. What are the types of equality?
3. What are the objections to simple equality and how can they be addressed?
4. What is distributive equality?
5. What are the modes of distribution recommended by various theories?
6. What are the objects of distribution?
7. Identify the principles of equality and determine their meaning.
8. Examine the FDRE Constitution and determine the type/types of equality and the
conceptions of equality it has endorsed.
9. Related to the above, examine how the FDRE Constitution addresses the
questions posed in developing a theory of distributive justice (listed under
‘presumption of equality’).
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Attachment A
The Stoics believe in the monism (oneness) of this world. Unlike Plato who declared the
dualism of this world (as material world and transcendental one), the Stoics taught the
oneness of it. Their basis of knowledge is material perception of the outside world. In
other words, they place knowledge in physical sensation, and reality -- what is known by
the senses -- is matter. All things, they said, even the soul, even God himself, are material
and nothing more than material. As the soul is for the body, God is for the world. God is
the soul of this world.
But in spite of this materialism, the Stoics declared that God is absolute reason. This is
not a return to idealism, and does not imply the incorporeality of God. For reason, like all
else, is material. It means simply that the divine fire is a rational element. Since God is
reason, it follows that the world is governed by reason, and this means two things. It
means, firstly, that there is purpose in the world, and therefore, order, harmony, beauty,
and design. Secondly, since reason is law as opposed to the lawless, it means that
universe is subject to the absolute sway of law, is governed by the rigorous necessity of
cause and effect. Hence the individual is not free. There can be no true freedom of the
will in a world governed by necessity. We may, without harm, say that we choose to do
this or that, and that our acts are voluntary. But such phrases merely mean that we assent
to what we do. What we do is none the less governed by causes, and therefore by
necessity.
The Stoic ethical teaching is based upon two principles already developed in the above
kind of approach; first, that the universe is governed by absolute law, which admits of no
exceptions; and second, that the essential nature of humans is reason. Both are summed
up in the famous Stoic maxim, "Live according to nature." This maxim has two aspects.
It means, in the first place, that men should conform themselves to nature in the wider
sense, that is, to the laws of the universe, and secondly, that they should conform their
actions to nature in the narrower sense, to their own essential nature, reason. These two
expressions mean, for the Stoics, the same thing. For the universe is governed not only by
law but also by the law of reason, and we, in following our own rational nature, are ipso
facto conforming ourselves to the laws of the larger world. In a sense, of course, there is
no possibility of our disobeying the laws of nature, for we, like all else in the world, act
of necessity. And it might be asked, what is the use of exhorting a person to obey the
laws of the universe, when, as part of the great mechanism of the world, we cannot by
any possibility do anything else? It is not to be supposed that a genuine solution of this
difficulty is to be found in Stoic philosophy. They urged, however, that, though we will
in any case do as the necessity of the world compels us, it is given to us alone, not merely
to obey the law, but to assent to our own obedience, to follow the law consciously and
deliberately, as only a rational being can. Virtue, then, is the life according to reason.
Morality is simply rational action. It is the universal reason which is to govern our lives,
not the caprice and self-will of the individual. The wise man consciously subordinates his
life to the life of the whole universe, and recognizes himself as a cog in the great
machine.
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Attachment B
A young man named Elmer E. Palmer living in New York State in 1882 who decided to
kill his grandfather was the bad man. Of course, murder was clearly defined as a crime,
but Elmer thought that by committing the act he would inherit under his grandfather’s
will. Perhaps he calculated that a long prison term plus eventual parole was worth the
money. In any event, there was no law on the New York books that said that a murderer
could not inherit under the terms of a will if he kills the testator. In the following
dialogues he asks his lawyer whether a murderer can inherit the estate of the victim. As it
is said it was an actual case that happened in the above mentioned state and year. The
outcome is shown at the end of the dialogue.
• Attorney: Have a seat, Elmer. What’s on your mind these days? Miss Fetch says you
have a question to ask me.
• Elmer: That is right, I do. I want to know whether an heir under a will would still get
the property even if he killed the testator.
• Attorney: I didn’t know you knew all those legal terms, like “testator” and “heir”.
Have you been looking up Blackstone or Kent? 8
• Elmer: As a matter of fact, I did take out the Blackstone book from the library. But it
wasn’t any help on this issue.
• Attorney: Well, I’m glad you’re so interested in the law. But I’m a bit surprised about
the question you asked. What made you think of it?
• Elmer: Well…..
• Attorney: I can imagine you would come up with lots of questions after reading some
of Blackstone. But a question that doesn’t even exist in Blackstone is another matter.
Was there actually something in Blackstone’s book that made you come up with this
particular question?
• Elmer: No. I read about it in a dime novel the other day.
• Attorney: And you rushed out to look up the law?
• Elmer: That is right.
• Attorney: Are you sure you don’t know anyone who is planning to kill his rich old
uncle?
• Elmer: Oh, no sir.
8
Legal scholars who wrote legal books.
229
• Attorney: Do you know anyone who has any notions of murder in mind?
• Elmer: No, I don’t
• Attorney: Now don’t get me wrong in my asking this, Elmer, but just of curiosity, your
grandfather has quite a bit of money, and you’d be the only logical beneficiary.
• Elmer: I don’t see what that has to do with it.
• Attorney: Nothing, my boy, nothing at all. You just set my mind thinking. Would you
know, by the way, whether you are the beneficiary under your grandfather’s will?
• Elmer: Isn’t that something you would know?
• Attorney: No, as a matter of fact. Your grandfather used other lawyers in town. But I
know he has a will, all right.
• Elmer: Well, I think I’m mentioned in his will. But I can’t be sure. Anyway, my
question has nothing to do with me.
• Attorney: I know that, Elmer, and I’m glad of it. I suppose it would be natural for a
beneficiary under a will sometimes to wonder when the testator is going to die, or
whether he might change the will before he dies. But I’m sure that those thoughts are
not at all what prompted your question.
• Elmer: Not at all. But I would like to know the law on the point.
• Attorney: I can’t give you an answer offhand. But I’ll do some research on it, just out
of curiosity. Here are a couple of books you might look into, too. You can come back
in about a week and we’ll discuss it at that time.
• Elmer: Thanks. I’ll see what the books say. May be there’s a rule in one of them that
covers the point.
• Attorney: I tend to doubt it since there was no rule in Blackstone. But we’ll see.
Meanwhile I want you to know one thing.
• Elmer: Yes?
• Attorney: Murder, as you know, is the most heinous crime of all. Anyone who kills
anyone else deserves to be hanged. I wouldn’t hesitate to turn over any information I
have about any murder to the police, even if it’s information about someone who is a
client of mine.
• Elmer: A client?
• Attorney: A client whom I know committed murder – so long as I didn’t get the
information in confidence from the client himself after the fact as my part of my job in
representing him. Even then, I wouldn’t know whether to represent him, but I don’t
suppose I could turn him into the police. But if someone is my client and I find out that
he committed a murder, the fact that he is my client won’t stop me from calling the
police.
• Elmer: I think I understand. But why are you telling me this?
• Attorney: I just want you to know, Elmer, about how I view my responsibility as a
lawyer. The very fact that you came in here and asked me a question about murders
and testators is a fact that I have to regard as a piece of evidence. Oh, it probably will
never be useful in any regard. But just suppose, Elmer, that your grandfather dies an
unusual death. In such a situation, the fact that you asked me the question about a
murder inheriting under a will would tend to throw a tiny bit of suspicion your way-
• -Elmer: But….
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• -Attorney: - even if you were perfectly innocent! You see, now that you have asked me
the question in a connection that has absolutely nothing to do with any action that you
yourself are contemplating, I would not regard it as confidential information under an
attorney-client privilege if subsequently there is an investigation of any possible
unnatural death of your grandfather.
• Elmer: I see.
• Attorney: All right, then. Come in next week and we’ll discuss your interesting
question.
• Elmer: (thinking for himself) Drat, I shouldn’t ask him. I should have done the
research by myself. But how? I don’t know how to do the research. I had to ask an
attorney. Oh, well, now that I asked him, I might as well go through with the
investigation. Whatever damage has been done can’t be undone. I’ll see him next week
and get his opinion.
Commentary
In one sense, nothing has happened so far. Elmer has simply asked a question of his
attorney. But in other sense something important has been suggested about the meaning
of “law”. In the context of this story, you should know that in the British legal system the
attorney himself is part of the legal system in more than just the technical sense that he is
an “officer of the court” in its fullest sense.
The attorney represents Elmer’s first contact with the legal process that is beginning to
take shape around Elmer’s question. As Elmer himself has discovered by failing to find
the question even mentioned in Blackstone or Kent, the two most consulted works of the
time, “Can a beneficiary inherit if he murders the testator?” is not an inquiry to which the
legal system provided an easy answer. But the legal system, through the attorney himself,
has started to respond. Even though the attorney has only said so far that he doesn’t know
the answer to the question, in fact he has begun to reveal the answer by the very attitude
that he has taken towards Elmer’s question. His attitude, Elmer has discovered, is
markedly negative. The attorney will research it as an “interesting” question, but he has
made it clear that he would be repelled if this question had any practical significance to
Elmer.
Thus, if Elmer were a very discerning chap, he might have said to himself that the
lawyer’s attitude is a good indication that the legal system as a whole will also have a
negative attitude toward such a question, for the lawyer is part of the legal system. But
Elmer is not even looking for a “hint” in these quarters. Instead, he is only upset that he
has aroused the suspicions of any unsympathetic attorney.
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doesn’t feel the attorney he is consulting has anything to do with the content of law. The
attorney is simply, to Elmer’s mind, a research assistant.
• Attorney: Come in, Elmer, I’ve had a chance to research that question of yours
now. I’ve turned up some interesting information.
• Elmer: Is there any law on the subject?
• Attorney: Well, that’s a large question. Let’s break it down. What do you mean by
“law”? Or, what is one of the things you mean by that term?
• Elmer: A statute?
• Attorney: Fine, we’ll start with that. I’ve done the research and the fact is that
there is no New York statue that deals with the subject of beneficiary taking if he
murdered the testator. There are lots of statutes, of course, that deal with taking
under wills, but there is none on the particular question you raised. In addition,
there are no relevant federal statutes.
• Elmer: How about other states? Or don’t they count?
• Attorney: In fact, I’ve not been able to come up with any legislation of any other
state on this matter, and suspect that if I looked at the legislation of other
countries I wouldn’t find anything either. Of course, statutes in other states or
countries would no be binding in New York, but it is interesting that your
question never seems to have occurred to any legislative body in all recorded
history.
• Elmer: How about cases?
• Attorney: Very good, Elmer. I can see that you’ve learned something from the
books I have given you. You are telling me that “law” means to you not only the
rules found in statutes but also the rules found in judicial decisions. Is that right?
• Elmer: Yes. From my point of view, I suppose that rules that are passed by the
legislature and rules that are passed by judges are the same- I mean they have the
same effect.
• Attorney: That is right, they do. A court will apply “precedent” just as it will
apply a statute. So I did some research on precedents.
• Elmer: And….?
• Attorney: There is no case in the books involving the murder of a testator by the
beneficiary.
• Elmer: None at all?
• Attorney: That’s right, to be precise about the matter. But you see, Elmer, an
attorney’s job can’t end by just looking up the question of whether there was
exactly the same case ever decided previously. There may be what we call an
analogous case -- A case where somewhat the same issue has come up in a
different setting.
• Elmer: I don’t know what that might be.
• Attorney: Well, I’ll tell you. I found a case that was decided in North Carolina that
involved a wife’s right to dower. She had been convicted of being an accessory
before the fact to the murder of her husband. In other words, she was involved in
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the murder of her husband, and yet she was claiming a share of his estate
(property).
• Elmer: That sounds pretty close to the question I asked you.
• Attorney: I thought so too.
• Elmer: What was the ruling?
• Attorney: The court held that the wife was entitled to dower.
• Elmer: And that’s the only case on the books?
• Attorney: Right. The only case tends to suggest that a murderer can inherit
anyway.
• Elmer: That just about answers my question, then.
• Attorney: Not so fast. There are several things we have to consider. In the first
place, as I told you, it was a North Carolina case, not a New York case.
• Elmer: Does that mean it has no effect in the New York state?
• Attorney: No, not exactly. As a matter of fact, I suspect that the New York courts
would want to follow the only precedent in point even if it is a decision in another
state. Judges, you might know, have some feeling that the law should be
consistent, and so that would feel a pressure to reach the same result as North
Carolina. But they are not bound to do so.
• Elmer: Not bound, you mean, like they would be if it were a New York decision?
• Attorney: Exactly. And even if it were a New York case, a later court can always
reverse the former precedent. But such instances of overrunning a precedent are
very rare.
• Elmer: So what you are saying is that a New York court probably would follow
North Carolina case?
• Attorney: Yes. At least, judges in this state would take the North Carolina case
into account as important factor. But now let’s look at a second issue. Just how
close is a case of dowry to a case involving a will?
• Elmer: It is exactly the same thing.
• Attorney: But a will isn’t a dowry.
• Elmer: I mean, the principle is the same.
• Attorney: You’re right that we have to look to the principle. But what is the
principle?
• Elmer: The principles inheriting an estate from someone you’ve killed.
• Attorney: Well, Elmer, that’s one principle. But let’s analyze it a different way.
Suppose we have a testator who announces to the beneficiary that he is going to
change his will, and the beneficiary fears that the change may be quite adverse to
the beneficiary. If the beneficiary hurries up and murders the testator before the
testator can change the will, then he will have profited enormously by the murder.
But look at the dowry situation. There the husband can’t change the way the
estate will devolve.
• Elmer: But the wife gets the estate sooner by murdering her husband.
• Attorney: Very true. But that’s true for the will situation as well. Indeed, the
murderer in both cases gets the property sooner than he would have if the owner
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died a natural death. So that is a point of similarity. But I have been talking about
a point of difference.
• Elmer: Suppose the husband divorced the wife? Wouldn’t the wife lose her dowry
interest?
• Attorney: Excellent question, Elmer. No, I think the situation would be different.
A beneficiary under a will has no claim whatsoever to the estate except the claim
that the will provides to him. If the will is changed and the beneficiary
distinguished, he has no claim that the will provides to him. If the will is changed
and the beneficiary disinherited, he has no claim (so long as the will is proper and
so forth). But a wife has a dowry interest when she is lawfully married. Therefore,
any divorce proceeding would have to take place in light of this dowry interest.
The wife might not agree to a divorce, or she might get a much more favorable
property settlement as part of the divorce than she would have received if there
were no dowry.
• Elmer: So then the cases are different?
• Attorney: Yes. Or at least I should say, a judge could find a difference between a
will case and dowry case if he wanted to.
• Elmer: What might make him want to?
• Attorney: Well, we’ll have to go into that. I have some other business to attend to
now, but we can talk if you come back later this afternoon. But let me say this
much. The case for the murderer taking under the will is pretty strong on its face.
There is no statute anywhere that says he can’t. The only case on a slightly
different point suggests that he can. And in addition to that, there are numerous
statutes regulating how a will is to be construed. These statutes, as well as judicial
precedent, instruct a judge to apply the terms of the will as written, and not to
attempt to change them. You know, if courts were to make exceptions in wills that
are not specified in the wills themselves, the amount of litigation in the probate
area would be contested, and all kinds of exceptions would be claimed. People
who make out wills would not be able to predict what exceptions a court write in.
The whole idea of a will would be eroded. That is why the statutes are so clear on
the point. Estate law is one branch of the law that adheres extremely closely to the
written word. If the testator himself does not make an exception cutting off any
beneficiary who murders him, the courts have no statutory authority to write such
an exception into a will. So, let me leave the situation with you for the moment as
saying that it looks like a pretty iron-cad case for the murderer taking under the
will, at least as far as the law on the books is concerned.
Commentary
Under positivist theory, “law” is a set of rules or norms or commands. In New York in
1882, there was no such rule regarding murderers taking under a will. Therefore, a
positivist would have to conclude that the rules pertaining to wills must be applied as
written, and a murderer must take. But our attorney is starting to suggest to Elmer a
different conception of “law” may be more accurate. The attorney has started to talk in
terms of predicting what a court will do. Elmer might have wished that a court would
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simply apply “the law” which, to Elmer, consists of the rules on the books. But the
attorney has begun to suggest that a court might not act in such a root-like manner.
Elmer might not like the way this matter is proceeding. But he has an interest in
predicting what a court will actually do. A pure positivist might not have such an interest.
The positivist might simply want to know what the “rule” is, and simultaneously concede
that for one reason or another a particular court might not act as it “should”. If the court
acts contrary to the “rule,” the positivist might conclude that the court was acting
illegally, or as a matter of “discretion,” or like a “legislature.”
Such concessions on the part of a positivist might not seem to him to be important to his
“theory”. But to Elmer they would be important, because at bottom Elmer is interested in
predicting what the court will do and not in vindicating a jurisprudential approach to the
meaning of law. Elmer is a real person asking a real question that has real consequences
for him, and therefore, we can say that the meaning of “law” as revealed to Elmer is
likely to accord with the usage of the term in ordinary language. Abstract definitions of
“law” formulated by philosophers interested in the term for “its own sake” (whatever that
means) are of little if any significance to Elmer.
Elmer: Well, sir I’ve done some thinking about what you have said and I’m convinced
that the answer to my question is that the murderer would take under the will. I think it
is clear as a matter of law. And there’s probably good reason for it too.
Attorney: Good reasons? Yes. I think there are some good reasons. But I’m glad you
brought up the matter of reasons. A mere rule itself is a fragile thing if there aren’t good
reasons to back it up. So we really should look at the reasons favoring the outcome that
you suggest and see if they are convincing.
Elmer: Well, I know one reason – the reason you suggested: a court which writes
exceptions into wills ruins the idea of wills.
Attorney: That certainly is one reason. But let’s take another. Why should a murderer get
rewarded for his crime by being allowed to inherit the estate?
Elmer: I don’t know. But isn’t it something outside the law to say whether someone gets
rewarded or not? I mean, shouldn’t the judges just apply the law, and not at the effects
of their decisions?
Attorney: that certainly is an approach, and a thoughtful one. But I think judges won’t
ignore the effect of what you do. Why should they? Justice isn’t “blind” in that sense. A
judge is part of the real world.
Elmer: Yes, but a judge is also someone who applies the law.
Attorney: Elmer, “the law” isn’t just the statutes and the cases, as I’m trying to point out
to you. Certainly the law is partly that, in fact mainly that. But it can be bit more, too. It
can involve the reasons behind the law. It can involve deep-seated principles that we all
share. It can involve looking at the effects of decisions. It can involve “justice”. All
these things are the things a judge should “apply”
Elmer: But all that looks pretty vague to me.
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Attorney: Well, the question you ask hasn’t come up yet, so what do you expect? Surely
you don’t expect the law to provide answers in the books to questions that haven’t
come up! So we have to proceed in what you call a vague fashion, since there isn’t a
better alternative. But let’s get down to brass tacks. There is a second answer to my
question about a murderer rewarded for what he has done.
Elmer: I can’t think of it.
Attorney: It is simply this. The United States Constitution and the Constitution of the
State of New York provide certain procedures and safeguards for a person accused of a
crime. A person may be declared guilty only after he has been given the right to a jury
trial, the right to confront witnesses, and after the case has been proved against him
beyond a reasonable doubt. When all that happen and a person is declared guilty, he
cannot be punished beyond the punishment prescribed by the law. A person convicted
of a felony for which the maximum penalty is 10 years in prison cannot be sentenced
by a judge to 20 years in prison, for example.
Elmer: what does this have to do with my question?
Attorney: Simply this. We assume that you have a murderer who has been convicted of
murder. Whatever his punishment is, it is that which has been prescribed by the
criminal law. Now a person can argue that no other court or official can add to that
punishment. Any additional punishment would be something that exceeds the
punishment prescribed by the criminal law. Moreover, any additional punishment from
a different court will be imposed upon the murderer without his having had the benefit
of a right to jury trial, proof beyond a reasonable doubt, and so forth. Thus, in a basic
constitutional sense, to take a murderer’s inheritance away from him would constitute
an additional penalty imposed upon him solely because of his crime, and that additional
penalty would not have been imposed according to the constitutional safeguards to
which the murderer was entitled.
Elmer: So it would be illegal for a court to deny the murderer his inheritance?
Attorney: I didn’t say that. I’m only giving you an argument, a reason perhaps that was in
the minds of the judges in the North Carolina in the dowry case.
Elmer: But surely a court can’t act contrary to the constitution?
Attorney: That’s right. But remember, a court interprets the constitution. If it doesn’t
think it is acting contrary to the constitution nothing I can tell you in this office is going
to change that fact. Besides, a court might get around the problem of additional
punishment.
Elmer: How?
Attorney: By saying that the murderer isn’t being deprived of his property, because the
property hasn’t been “vested” in him. If the property isn’t vested in him, the court isn’t
taking it away.
Elmer: That sounds fishy.
Attorney: It is, in a way. What the court would be saying is that the property isn’t the
murderer’s until the court itself has construed the will. If part of the court’s construction
of the will is to read in an exception for murderers, then the exception has been read in
before the property got to the murderers. So the court would be taking nothing away
from him
Elmer: That‘s not only fishy. Surely the court would be taking away from the murderer
something that would otherwise be his.
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Attorney: Not quite. It would be “his” if he weren’t a murderer! But, I agree, this line of
argument is pretty suspicious. I only want to point out to you that a court would be
capable of coming up with it just in order to refute the “additional penalty” argument
that I gave you. So we have to conclude that the additional penalty point is only an
argument, not a conclusive thing by any means.
Elmer: Well, can I ask if there are any more reasons in favor of allowing the murderer to
take under the will?
Attorney: I have thought of a third one, though it’s not likely that a court would pay much
attention to it comes up in argument. But let me give you a possible situation. Suppose
the testator has an estate worth a million and five dollars. He draws up a will dividing
his estate into two parts absolute: a million dollars goes to his son, and five dollars for a
tiny organization called citizens for the Restoration of British Sovereignty in America.
Then his son murders him. Suppose the court were to decide that the son cannot inherit
the million dollars because he murdered the testator. Should the million dollars then be
paid over to the other beneficiary? You see, the estate has to go somewhere. It can’t
revert back to the state because any such rule would encourage the judiciary, which is
part of the state, to find such reversions. There are laws that require that the estate go to
the beneficiaries. So who would the court be benefiting by disinheriting the murderers?
Elmer: You mean, in any will at all there will be a question of who gets the money if the
murderer doesn’t get it?
Attorney: Exactly. Giving the money to the other persons in the will might be worse than
giving it to the murderer. Of course, it is not really a question of worse or better, but of
the intent of the testator. Suppose a court says that it cannot imagine that the testator, if
he was aware of the problem, would have intended to give the money to a murderer?
All right, but then what would have been his intent? To make my preceding example
stronger, suppose his son has several children, but the father instead of providing
directly for the children in the will gave the estate outfights to the son. Then the son
murders the father. Suppose in addition that the son is going to be hanged for murder
and will thus die shortly. If the court takes the money away from the son and instead
gives it to the citizens for the Restoration of British Sovereignty, the court in fact will
be depriving the grandchildren of the estate. Surely, the testator would not have wanted
such a result. We can suppose that even if he knew about the murder, he would still
have wanted his grandchildren to inherit at least part of the estate and not be left
penniless after their father is hanged.
Elmer: Will the court always construe a will according to the intent of the testator?
Attorney: Well, they construe wills as written, but the written words are taken to indicate
the testator’s exact intent. When the words are ambiguous, courts may look to other
evidences of the testator’s intent. Now, in your murderer question, there is no
ambiguity whatsoever in the will, and hence there is no cause at all for a court to look
for other indications of the testator’s intent. Even if a court did want to look beyond the
will for evidence of intent an argument would be possible, along the lines I’ve
suggested, that the testator might have intended that the person who murdered him take
the estate anyway, especially if the facts are as strong as the ones I’ve suggested in my
fanciful example.
Elmer: As long as these speculations seem to have something to do with the law, I might
as well mention a couple of ideas I’ve had since our last conversation.
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Attorney: such as?
Elmer: Well, you said that a murderer might act so that the testator doesn’t have a chance
to change the will. But suppose the testator would have changed the will to give more
of the estate to the person who murdered him. You know, a change in a will can act to a
person’s benefit as well as to his harm. We can’t just assume that the murderer gets an
advantage by killing the testator.
Attorney: Very good. What else?
Elmer: Suppose the testator wants the beneficiary to murder him? Suppose he’s told the
beneficiary that he’s looking for some way to die but doesn’t believe in suicide or is
afraid to commit suicide. Or, he might be in great pain and ask the beneficiary to put
him out of his pain?
Attorney: Also very good. Elmer, you’ve been doing a powerful lot of thinking about all
this.
Elmer: It looks like you have too.
Attorney: Yes, it is an interesting problem and I’ve put more time in it than I should have,
just because it interests me. But you’ve never taken any interest in the law before. Why
this great interest on your part?
Elmer: Nothing in particular. It’s just that your ideas have led me to think about it.
Attorney: Well, your ideas do have some merit. A court shouldn’t simply assume that the
murder is committed so that an adverse change in the will can be prevented. And
sometimes, though this one seems far-fetched, the testator might want to be murdered.
Of course, that would still be murder, but I take it your real point is that if the testator
wanted to be murdered he would still have intended that the murderer take under the
will.
Elmer: Yes.
Attorney: So what do you think?
Elmer: Well, as I said at the beginning, I think the case is more solid than ever. There’s
no statute or case saying a murderer should be read out of his victim’s will. And as I
count them, there are at least five reasons, some of course a lot stronger than others,
which support allowing a murderer to collect under the will. I agree that you have
shown that each of the reasons is not itself conclusive on the court-it can wriggle out of
any one of them by some idea or other like the one you call “vesting”. But taken
together they should be conclusive. Don’t you agree?
Attorney: No.
Elmer: What?
Attorney: Just as I said.
Elmer: Why?
Attorney: Let’s look at the reasons on the other side. Now, some of them we’ve already
considered. There’s the one about the murderer acting to prevent the will from being
changed. You’re right, that won’t always necessarily be the situation but a court will
probably think that the murderer felt he had good reason to commit a crime. If the
murderer thought he would benefit from the testator’s living a bit longer and changing
the will, then the murderer would no act.
Elmer: But the murderer might not know what the testator would do.
Attorney: I’ll grant you that. Yet, you see, there is something to the argument concerning
change, and it does to an extent distinguish the North Carolina case. Also, the “vesting”
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point I mentioned is a possible argument on the other side. In addition, there is
something to the notion of the court’s assumption that the testator would not have
intended to have the murderer take under the will had the testator though about the
problem, though there too a lot of difficulty attaches to a court’s taking such a position
and rewriting a will to accord to what it thinks the testator would have wanted.
Elmer: The policy against rewriting wills makes all of those arguments weak.
Attorney: May be so, but there are better arguments against the opposite result, arguments
which in my opinion – well, I won’t give you my final verdict until we have looked at
the arguments.
Elmer: O.K. what can they be?
Attorney: First of all, let’s look at the effect of a decision allowing a murderer to take
under a will. The public will be put on notice that one way to get an estate would be to
murder the testator. Lots of crazy people might be encouraged to do so.
Elmer: But-
Attorney: I know, you’re going to say that it would make no sense for someone to commit
murder if he wants to enjoy the property he receives. But remember, life insurance
contracts typically have a provision that disallows suicide, because people have been
known to commit suicide so that their families will inherit the life insurance proceeds.
The courts might simply not want to be a party to any decision that would encourage
such a fundamentally immoral act as murder.
Elmer: I was going to say, what business is it of a court to make the judgment in the first
place?
Attorney: Well, if you are saying a legislature should deal with the question, I agree. It
would be better if a legislature did so. But a legislature might not get around to doing it,
and meanwhile a court is faced with a decision to make. The court can’t reach a “bad”
result simply by thinking that the legislature will come along later and correct it. A
court is under some pressure to come up with good results irrespective of what the
legislature will do.
Elmer: All right, may be the result isn’t desirable. But on what law can the court base the
decision you seem to be predicting?
Attorney: Not any “law” in the sense of rules in statues or cases. But let’s look at some
other sorts of “law”. For instance, there are various principles in the law that have been
repeated in many cases and approved by many writers. You can find them in
Blackstone and Kent, among other places. In particular, it’s often been said that “no one
shall be permitted to profit by his own fraud, or to take advantage of his own wrong, or
to found any claim upon his own inquiry, or to acquire property by his own crime.
Elmer: But are those statements rules of law?
Attorney: No, they are maxims, or standards, or principles, or whatever you want to call
them. Sometimes they apply and sometimes they don’t, which is a rather frustrating
feature that they have. For example, they don’t apply to the rule in property known as
adverse possession, where a person gains the property of another by virtue of his own
wrongful trespass exercised openly for a period of years! Or take the case of an
employee who breaks his contract to take a high-paying job. He might have to pay
damages to his first employer, but he can keep his new salary, and therefore the law
allows him to profit by his own breach of contract.
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Elmer: So sometimes they are rules and sometimes they aren’t. Just what do you think a
court will do?
Attorney: Well, Elmer, after all this thinking and research, it comes down in my mind to a
kind of intuitive feeling. I predict, on the basis of what I know about court and judges
and the legal system, that a court simply will not want to be party to a murderer’s
scheme to collect under a will. It’s as simple as that. The judiciary will not want to be
involved in that kind of enterprise. A court faced with the question would probably hold
that the murderer cannot take the inheritance. The court will perceive its decision to be
in accordance with “justice”. That might not mean precisely that the right party will
receive the funds (recall my citizens for British Sovereignty example), but it will help
guarantee that criminals get what most people would probably say is coming to them.
In other words, the court simply might not want to think of itself as any sort of an
instrument enabling a murderer to profit from his crime.
Elmer: That is very vague.
Attorney: I know. That’s why I’ve mentioned other arguments, like listing some
principles that have been used in many other cases. You can view these as make-
weights if you want to, or you might view them as suggestive of the same general
result. The maxim that a person should not be allowed to profit by his own wrongdoing
is perhaps another way of starting that the courts will not allow themselves to be
instrumental in a person’s scheme to profit from his own wrong. Of course, sometimes
courts do exactly that, as in the case of adverse possession, or perhaps in the North
Carolina case concerning dower. But although courts sometimes do it, I don’t think
they want to, and I do think that they will try to avoid it whenever they will try to avoid
it whenever they can. Thus, I would conclude that there is considerably more of a
chance than not that a court would not allow the murder to take under the will.
Elmer: So you think the court would probably act contrary to the law?
Attorney: Not at all, Elmer. It might be acting contrary to some rules, and it might not be
able to cite a statutory rule in its favor. But the law is something more than those rules.
In fact, the law, as I’ve tried to suggest to you, is really a prediction of what courts will
decide. If you want to have my prediction right now at this moment, I would have to
say that there’s a better chance than not that a court will hold against the murderer.
Elmer: This is your intuition?
Attorney: Yes, in a way. It’s the same intuition I had when I first heard your question. All
the research we’ve done in between hasn’t really changed my opinion.
Elmer: Well, thank you very much for your opinion. I can’t see how you could reach that
result in the light of all the statutes and cases and other considerations that we talked
about. Your idea of law is too vague for me. I guess I just don’t think of law that way.
Attorney: You are entitled to your opinion. I just hope that in your lifetime and mine no
court will ever be faced with this particular question. As much as I’d like to know
whether my idea of the law is right or not, I hope your question is never answered by
any court.
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- The End –
Postscript
The murder is committed off-stage, after the performance, by Elmer. A following drama,
People v. Palmer, is a straightforward criminal trial ending in a conviction of second-
degree murder. After that there is a new courtroom drama taking place in Probate Court
entitled Riggs v.Palmer, where Elmer is stripped of his rights under the will and the estate
passes instead to his aunts.
CONCLUSION
If Elmer was, as it was hypothesized, a pure positivist, the decision by the probate court
must have come as a complete surprise to him. I have tried to show by means of a
fictitious dialogue that a lawyer could have predicted the result in advance. Of course, no
prediction served to stop the original Elmer Parmer. But something like it might have
deterred other nameless would-be murderers before 1889; the idea of killing a testator in
order to take under a will was at least conceivable for centuries before that time. There is
no way we will ever know whether any such deterrent was operative, but if the lawyer’s
intuitive reactions are any persuasive indication, in a very real sense “the law” could have
so operated in this peculiar situation.
I hope the dialogue concerning “Elmer’s Law” has helped to clarify the notion of law as a
prediction of official behavior. Justice Holmes was apparently the first to write that “law”
is a prophecy of what courts will do, but this seminal idea became distorted in the later
writings of the American realist school into an equation of “law” with the actual decision
of officials. A great deal now remains to be sorted out about the predictive theory of law.
But one thing seems clear. If “law” is to mean something that can affect (change, modify)
human behavior, then it must operate at the time that a person has a choice to make
concerning his own plans or activities. If it only operates after the fact – i.e., when an
official finally is called in to make some judgment about the person’s compacted act –
then it can hardly be called “law”. A prediction of official behavior, however, does
operate in the present. It comes into play when a person such as Elmer, is contemplating
whether to do or refrain from doing something. A lawyer is not needed to make the
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prediction, although the more one knows about law the better the prediction will be.
Elmer himself could have reached some conclusions regarding the New York courts’
most probable course of action. The real Elmer may in fact have looked up the law in
Blackstone and proceeded to commit the crime, secure in his own mind that he would
receive the estate even if convicted of murder.
If Elmer did do so, then he fell into the positivist trap of equating the law with “rules” on
the books. To be sure, a rule is usually a good predictor of official behavior. But it
doesn’t always work, particularly in the common law system.
Majority decision
In 1986 the Supreme Court faced the same question the Wolfenden Report dealt with in
1957: whether private consensual homosexual sodomy could be properly prohibited by
law. The majority of the Court held that it could, while four justices dissented. The
arguments of the two sides, represented by Justice White's majority opinion and Justice
Blackmun's dissent, correspond with remarkable similarity to the respective positions of
Devlin and his critic, Hart. It is interesting that, despite the intense criticism Devlin's
position has come under since its articulation over twenty-five years ago, the majority in
Bowers case adopted it, while the dissent was left to point out the more contemporary
counterarguments, both legal and philosophical, by which the majority remained
unmoved.
By rejecting the privacy argument presented by the defendant, the majority decision
refuses to recognize Hart's distinction between what is indecent and offensive, for
example committing sodomy in public, and what is simply immoral, committing the same
act in private. Refusing to extend privacy to consensual sexual practices, the majority
decision undermines personal liberty and permits the state to regulate its citizens' most
intimate decisions. By refusing to consider the areas of private consensual sexual activity
off-limits for criminal legislation, the Court ignored the more recent philosophical
arguments, and permitted itself to reject Hardwick's claim based on the substance of his
activity.
The majority of the Court that engaged in a Devlinian analysis, emphasizing the
consensus on the issue of the immorality of consensual sodomy, pointing out that sodomy
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was illegal at common law, forbidden by the original thirteen colonies, outlawed by all 50
states until 1961 and still illegal in 24 states on the District of Columbia. The Court's
reliance on history and common conceptions of morality illustrates its allegiance to
Devlin's way of thinking: the state has a right to regulate private activity to preserve
current morality.
The majority opinion rejects Mill's principle, saying that victimless crimes should not
escape the law, even when committed consensually and in private. If privacy in the home
were permitted for this purpose, the Court asserted, "it would be difficult, except by fiat,
to limit the claimed right to homosexual conduct while leaving exposed to prosecution
adultery, incest and other sexual crimes even though they are committed in the home."
The Court ignored the fact that Mill's principle would permit the state to regulate these
other sexual crimes because they cause harm to other and are therefore not regulated as
immoral per se.
In general, the majority's argument is generally Devlinian and leaves itself open to
criticism. Instead of examining an individual instance of the interaction between law and
morality to determine whether it amounts to an enforcement of morality per se without
other justification, the majority opinion says simply that the law cannot stay wholly
separate from morality, and believes that the inquiry should end there. In this way it
confuses "sometimes" and "always" in the same way Feinberg's (another Devlin’s
critique) Devlin did, and assumes that the present morality is the only morality which
should be protected.
Blackmun's dissent
Justice Blackmun's dissent on behalf of three of the four dissenting justices represents an
expression of the Hart position. His opinion frames the issue in terms of individual liberty
saying that the challenged statute "denies individuals the right to decide for themselves
whether to engage in particular forms of private, consensual sexual activity." Blackmun's
dissent views the question as one of privacy and individual liberty, rather than a
fundamental right to commit homosexual sodomy; that "the Constitution embodies a
promise that a certain private sphere or individual liberty will be kept largely beyond the
reach of government." The question of private consensual sodomy should be left out of
moral machine of the criminal law.
Blackmun challenged the majority's willingness to base its decisions on familiar moral
judgments, that such moral judgments, "ought not to conclude [the Court's] judgment
upon the question whether statutes embodying them conflict with the Constitution of the
United States." If the Court wants to enforce morality, Blackmun would have it adopt a
concept of privacy that "embodies the 'moral fact that a person belongs to himself and not
others nor to society as a whole.'"
Blackmun's opinion directly opposes Devlin's disintegration thesis, and points out that, in
an earlier decision, the majority of the Court did as well: he quotes a 1943 case in which
the Court said "we apply the limitations of the Constitution with no fear that freedom to
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be intellectually and spiritually diverse or even contrary will disintegrate the social
organization." Further, freedom to disagree with the majority on important matters is the
most important to protect; since the issue of sexuality, "touches the heart of what makes
individuals what they are we should be especially sensitive to the rights of those whose
choices upset the majority."
The dissent also recognizes Hart's distinction between indecent and immoral acts: the fact
that the conduct could be punished if in public does not mean that the state should be
permitted to regulate that behavior when it takes place in private. Blackmun's decision
actually quotes Hart on the issue and points out that the majority of the Court fails to see
the difference between laws that protect the public sensibilities and those that enforce
private morality.
Conclusion
John Stuart Mill proclaimed in 1859 that "the only purpose for which power can be
rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to
prevent harm to others." Justice White said in 1986 that "victimless crimes . . . do not
escape the law [even] when committed at home," and held that private consensual
sodomy could be criminally prohibited by state. An analysis of Bowers in light of the
philosophical debate indicates that the majority of the Court remains in the 1960s mindset
of Lord Devlin, while the dissenters have considered and applied the more recent
arguments of Hart.
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