Csaba Varga - Rule Of Law Or Dilemma Of Ethos

  • Uploaded by: Dr. Csaba Varga
  • 0
  • 0
  • December 2019
  • PDF

This document was uploaded by user and they confirmed that they have the permission to share it. If you are author or own the copyright of this book, please report to us by using this DMCA report form. Report DMCA


Overview

Download & View Csaba Varga - Rule Of Law Or Dilemma Of Ethos as PDF for free.

More details

  • Words: 1,434
  • Pages: 2
Rule of Law, or the Dilemma of an Ethos: to be Gardened or Mechanicised by CSABA VARGA* [Abstract] One of the post-dictatorship models for transition is exemplified by total defeat with military administration and jurisdiction, breaking past continuity through preventing local practices to re-organise while re-educating for democracy, as patterned by the allied powers after WWII in Germany, Italy and Japan, and quite another of them at the other extreme is just to declare a full pledged rule of law scheme put in operation from an artificial zero point on, as practiced in Central Europe after the fall of communism. Almost opposite are the costs and benefits of either ideals on behalf of both the party having generated the given solution and the party whom it was generated to. And the fact notwithstanding that the legacies of bygone regimes with the task of selecting one of these fresh new ideal starts to implement upon after their fall are hardly comparable to one another, their underlying philosophies, together with the corresponding politicocultural and anthropological pre-assumptions, are also close to appear and actually work as antagonistic. Practice in Central Europe is varying in terms of whether or not the rule of law is conceived of as a set of expectations to be considered categorically absolute as quasi exhaustively codified or it is a most respectable ideal having once developed in response to particular challenges in given cultures under given historical conditions, that is, an art of how to balance amongst differing, moreover, conflicting values and interests within its ethos, a strive never to end and close indeed as it is a learning process itself: a compound of various viewpoints, layers and levels, which surfaces new features once genuinely new challenges it is to meet. As it has since long been established by legal sociology and then by legal hermeneutics as well, a legal system in operation is by far more than a mere skeleton made up by formal enactments. In fact, it is a working unit of formal and informal components upon the basis of some legal culture with an adequate tradition in the background. As it has been argued for by Scandinavian legal realism, rules, either enacted or casually reconstructed, are sheer indicators of kinds of underlying normativity already in operation, from which they can surface as icebergs’ visible tops at the most. All in all, transfers and impositions risk of being wedged in a contexture having been or remaining alien to them, either detaching themselves as an external interference with the target system or decompose the said system itself by re-routing its further development on an artificial path, detached from the system’s original culture and tradition. *

Scientific Adviser, Institute for Legal Studies of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (H–1250 Budapest, P.O. Box 25), Professor, Pázmány Péter Catholic University Faculty of Law, Founding Director of its Institute for Legal Philosophy (H–1428 Budapest 8, P.O. Box 6) [email protected] / http://varga.jak.ppke.hu

Whether or not the new language happens to be predominantly American, i.e., formulated in the one of rights and human rights, and how much the borrower’s peculiar technicality and procedural approach departmentalises or even dissolves the common responsibility once born for the res publica’s sake even vivid under the old regime, is another issue that needs to be examined alongside the scholarly treatment of law & development, law & modernisation, as well as within the problem of globalised legal transfers. Eventually and in any case, as far as the way of mastering (or the caring humility towards) the instrument is concerned, a choice has finally to be made between the attitudes of a circus trainer and a gardener. In any case and especially in the Central European region with active constitutional adjudication now, there is a temptation at substituting past nihilism of the rule of law to a kind of fetishism, which may further strengthen the dependence of target countries on pattern-followance and thereby weaken their creative forces and sense of self-esteem and self-responsibility, vitally neeed for their successful recovery. A political adviser (between 2001 and 2004) to Dr József Antall, the first free-elected Primer Minister of the Republic of Hungary after the fall of Communism, Professor Dr Csaba VARGA has, in addition to a number of books he authored or edited in English, published widely also on the topic of “Rule of Law on the International Agenda: Policy, Politics and Morality”, including, among others, Transition to Rule of Law On the Democratic Transformation in Hungary (Budapest: ELTE “Comparative Legal Cultures” Project 1995) 190 [Philosophiae Iuris] review: Michael Bogdan in Svensk Juristtidning 80 (1995) 9, 749–750; A[ndré-]J[ean]A[rnaud] in Droit et Société 32 (1996); Георги Денков ‘Унгарският преход към върховенство на правото’ Правна Мисъл [Sofia] XXXVIII (1997) 1, 72–73; Acta Juridica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 41 (2000) 3–4, 157–158 Coming to Terms with the Past under the Rule of Law The German Model, [pre-ed.] (Budapest 1994) xiii + 136 [Windsor Klub] & Coming to Terms with the Past under the Rule of Law The German and the Czech Models (Budapest 1994) xxvii + 178 [Windsor Klub] Kiáltás gyakorlatiasságért a jogállami átmenetben [A cry for practicalness in transition to rule of law] (Budapest: [AKAPrint] 1998) 122 [A Windsor Klub könyvei II] ‘Do we have the Right to Judge the Past? Philosophy of Law Considerations for a Period of Transition’ Rechtstheorie 23 (1992) 3, 396–404 ‘The Dilemma of Enforcing the Law’ in Rechtsnorm und Rechtswirklichkeit Festschrift für Werner Krawietz zum 60. Geburtstag, hrsg. Aulis Aarnio & Stanley L. Paulson & Ota Weinberger & Georg Henrik von Wright & Dieter Wyduckel (Berlin: Duncker & Humblot 1993), 427–435 & ‘Coming to Terms with the Past and its Statutory Limitations’ in European Legal Cultures ed. Volkmar Gessner & Armin Hoeland & Csaba Varga (Aldershot, Brookfield USA, Singapore, Sydney: Dartmouth 1995), 442–444 [Tempus Textbook Series on European Law and European Legal Cultures, 1] ‘Local Legal Tradition in Question’ in The Legacy of the Past As a Factor of the Transformation Process in Postcommunist Countries of Central Europe (The Territory of Poland, Czech Republic, Slovak Republic, Hungary, former GDR) December 7–9, 1993, in Prague, ed. Vladimira Dvoráková & Emil Vorácek (Prague: University of Economics Department of Political Science 1994), 315–325 ‘Transformation to Rule of Law from No-law: Societal Contexture of the Democratic Transition in Central and Eastern Europe’ The Connecticut Journal of International Law [Hartford] 8 (Spring 1993) 2, 487–505 & ‘The Building up of a Rule of Law Structure on the Ruins of a Regime Based upon the Denial of Law in Central Europe’ in Law at the Turn of the Twentieth Century International Conference Thessaloniki 1993, ed. L. E. Kotsiris (Thessaloniki: Sakkoulas 1994), 219–239 & ‘The Transformation of Legal Culture in the Central European Transition’ in Rättsliga kulturer och normativa strukturer Nordiskt Rättssociologiskt Forum, 25–27 augusti 1995 (Lund 1995), 1–18 [mimeo] & ‘Transformation to Rule of Law from No-law: The sui generis Nature of the Challenge in Central & Eastern Europe’ in Law, Justice and the State Abstracts of Working-Group Papers, comp. Eyja Margét Brynjarsdóttir (Reykjavík: University of Iceland 1993), 98 [16th World Congress on Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy] & ‘Constitutionalism, the Rule of Law, and the Challenge of Transition’ in Constitutionalism & Politics International Symposium, November 11–14, 1993, ed. Irena Grudzinska Gross (Bratislava: Slovak Committee of the European Cultural Foundation 1994), 151–154 [IV Bratislava Symposium 1993] & ‘Complexity of the Challenge Facing Central and Eastern Europe’ in European Legal Cultures ed. Volkmar Gessner & Armin Hoeland & Csaba Varga (Aldershot, Brookfield USA, Singapore, Sidney: Dartmouth 1995), [introduction to Part V: Transition to the Rule of Law] 415–429 [Tempus Textbook Series on European Law and European Legal Cultures, 1] ‘Rule of Law between the Scylla of Imported Patterns and the Charybdis of Actual Realisations (The Experience of Lithuania)’ Acta Juridica Hungarica 46 (2005) 1–2, 1–11 & http://www.akademiai.com/media/37knultrmmv9b6ykpee7/contributions/m/3/2/9/m3296v37841w54h0.pdf & Rechtstheorie 38 (2007) 1, 1–11 {in press} ‘Rule of Law – At the Crossroads of Challenges’ Iustum, Aequum, Salutare [Budapest] I (2005) 1–2, 73–88 ‘Transfers of Law: A Conceptual Analysis’ in Hungary’s Legal Assistance Experiences in the Age of Globalization ed. Mamoru Sadakata (Nagoya: Nagoya University Graduate School of Law Center for Asian Legal Exchange 2006), 21–41 ‘Transition to Rule of Law: A Philosophical Assessment of Challenges and Realisations in a Historico-comparative Perspective’ in Hungary’s Legal Assistance Experiences in the Age of Globalization ed. Mamoru Sadakata (Nagoya: Nagoya University Graduate School of Law Center for Asian Legal Exchange 2006), 185–214 ‘Legal Renovation through Constitutional Judiciary?’ in Hungary’s Legal Assistance Experiences in the Age of Globalization ed. Mamoru Sadakata (Nagoya: Nagoya University Graduate School of Law Center for Asian Legal Exchange 2006), 287–312

Related Documents


More Documents from ""

December 2019 0
May 2020 13
May 2020 16
Antlr
May 2020 4
Gnuplot And C
May 2020 6