Word Net
wrongful adj1 having no legally established claim; "the
wrongful heir to the throne" [syn: unlawful]
2 unlawfully violating the rights of others;
"wrongful death"; "a wrongful diversion of trust income"
3 not just or fair; "a wrongful act"; "a wrongful
charge"
Moby Thesaurus
aberrant, abnormal, abominable, actionable, against the law, anarchic, anarchistic, anomic, atrocious, black-market, bootleg, chargeable, contraband, contrary to law, criminal, delinquent, deviant, disgraceful, evil, felonious, flawed, hardly the thing, ignominious, illegal, illegitimate, illicit, impermissible, improper, inappropriate, incorrect, indecorous, inequitable, infamous, iniquitous, irregular, justiciable, lawless, nonconstitutional, nonlegal, nonlicit, not done, not the thing, off-base, off-color, out-of-line, outlaw, outlawed, punishable, sacrilegious, scandalous, shameful, shameless, sinful, terrible, triable, unallowed, unauthorized, unbalanced, unconstitutional, under-the-counter, under-the-table, undeserved, undue, unequal, unequitable, uneven, unfit, unfitting, unjust, unlawful, unmeet, unmerited, unofficial, unrighteous, unrightful, unseemly, unstatutory, unsuitable, unwarrantable, unwarranted, wicked, wrongIn a global economy, law is globalising too.
International law can refer to three things: public international
law, private international law or conflict of laws and the law of
supranational organisations.
- Public international law concerns relationships among sovereign nations. It has a special status as law because there is no international police force, and courts lack the capacity to penalise disobedience. The sources for public international law to develop are custom, practice and treaties between sovereign nations. The United Nations, founded under the UN Charter, is one of the most important international organisations. It was established after the Treaty of Versailles' failed to prevent the Second World War. International agreements, like the Geneva Conventions on the conduct of war, and international bodies such as the International Court of Justice, International Labour Organisation, the World Trade Organisation, or the International Monetary Fund, also form a growing part of public international law.
- Conflict of laws (or "private international law" in civil law countries) concerns which jurisdiction a legal dispute between private parties should be heard in and which jurisdiction's law should be applied. Today, businesses are increasingly capable of shifting capital and labour supply chains across borders, as well as trading with overseas businesses. This increases the number of disputes outside a unified legal framework. Increasing numbers of businesses opt for commercial arbitration under the New York Convention 1958.
- European Union law is the first and thus far only example of a supranational legal framework. However, given increasing global economic integration, many regional agreements—especially the Union of South American Nations—are on track to follow the same model. In the EU, sovereign nations have pooled their authority through a system of courts and political institutions. They have the ability to enforce legal norms against and for member states and citizens, in a way that public international law does not. As the European Court of Justice said in 1962, European Union law constitutes "a new legal order of international law" for the mutual social and economic benefit of the member states.
Constitutional and administrative law
Constitutional and administrative law govern the affairs of the state. Constitutional law concerns both the relationships between the executive, legislature and judiciary and the human rights or civil liberties of individuals against the state. Most jurisdictions, like the United States and France, have a single codified constitution, with a Bill of Rights. A few, like the United Kingdom, have no such document. A "constitution" is simply those laws which constitute the body politic, from statute, case law and convention. A case named Entick v. Carrington illustrates a constitutional principle deriving from the common law. Mr Entick's house was searched and ransacked by Sheriff Carrington. When Mr Entick complained in court, Sheriff Carrington argued that a warrant from a Government minister, the Earl of Halifax, was valid authority. However, there was no written statutory provision or court authority. The leading judge, Lord Camden, stated that,"The great end, for which men entered into
society, was to secure their property. That right is preserved
sacred and incommunicable in all instances, where it has not been
taken away or abridged by some public law for the good of the
whole… If no excuse can be found or produced, the silence of the
books is an authority against the defendant, and the plaintiff must
have judgment."
The fundamental constitutional principle,
inspired by
John Locke, is that the individual can do anything but that
which is forbidden by law, and the state may do nothing but that
which is authorised by law. Administrative
law is the chief method for people to hold state bodies to
account. People can apply for judicial
review of actions or decisions by local councils, public
services or government ministries, to ensure that they comply with
the law. The first specialist administrative court was the Conseil
d'État set up in 1799, as Napoleon
assumed power in France.
Criminal law
Criminal law is the body of law that defines criminal offences and the penalties for convicted offenders. Apprehending, charging, and trying suspected offenders is regulated by the law of criminal procedure. The paradigm case of a crime lies in the proof, beyond reasonable doubt, that a person is guilty of two things. First, the accused must commit an act which is deemed by society to be criminal, or actus reus (guilty act). Second, the accused must have the requisite malicious intent to do a criminal act, or mens rea (guilty mind). However for so called "strict liability" crimes, which include cases like dangerous driving, proof of mens rea is not necessary. An actus reus is enough.Examples of different kinds of crime include
murder, assault, fraud or theft. In exceptional
circumstances, defences can exist to some crimes, such as killing
in self
defence, or pleading insanity.
Another example is in the 19th century English case of
R v. Dudley and Stephens, which tested a defence of "necessity". The Mignotte,
sailing from Southampton to
Sydney,
sank. Three crew members and a cabin boy were stranded on a raft.
They were starving and the cabin boy was close to death. Driven to
extreme hunger, the crew killed and ate the cabin boy. The crew
survived and were rescued, but put on trial for murder. They argued
it was necessary to kill the cabin boy to preserve their own lives.
Lord Coleridge, expressing immense disapproval, ruled, "to
preserve one's life is generally speaking a duty, but it may be the
plainest and the highest duty to sacrifice it." The men were
sentenced to hang, but
public opinion, especially among seafarers, was outraged and
overwhelmingly supportive of the crew's right to preserve their own
lives. In the end, the Crown
commuted their sentences to six months in jail.
Criminal law offences are viewed as offences
against not just individual victims, but the community as
well.
Contract law
The concept of a "contract" is based on the Latin phrase pacta sunt servanda (agreements must be kept). Contracts can be simple everyday buying and selling or complex multi-party agreements. They can be made orally (e.g. buying a newspaper) or in writing (e.g. signing a contract of employment). Sometimes formalities, such as writing the contract down or having it witnessed, are required for the contract to take effect (e.g. when buying a house).In common law jurisdictions, there are three key
elements to the creation of a contract. These are offer
and acceptance, consideration and an
intention to create legal relations. For example, in
Carlill v. Carbolic Smoke Ball Company a medical firm
advertised that its new wonder drug, the smokeball, would cure
people's flu, and if
it did not, the buyers would get £100. Many
people sued for their £100 when the drug did not work. Fearing
bankruptcy, Carbolic
argued the advert was not to be taken as a serious, legally binding
offer. It was an invitation
to treat, mere puff, a gimmick. But the court of appeal held
that to a reasonable
man Carbolic had made a serious offer. People had given good
consideration for
it by going to the "distinct inconvenience" of using a faulty
product. "Read the advertisement how you will, and twist it about
as you will", said
Lord Justice Lindley, "here is a distinct promise expressed in
language which is perfectly unmistakable". In civil
law jurisdictions, consideration is not a requirement for a
contract at all. In France,
an ordinary contract is said to form simply on the basis of a
"meeting of the minds" or a "concurrence of wills". Germany
has a special approach to contracts, which ties into property law.
Their 'abstraction
principle' (Abstraktionsprinzip) means that the personal
obligation of contract forms separately from the title of property
being conferred. When contracts are invalidated for some reason
(e.g. a car buyer is so drunk that he lacks legal capacity to
contract) the contractual obligation to pay can be invalidated
separately from the proprietary title of the car. Unjust
enrichment law, rather than contract law, is then used to
restore title to the rightful owner.
Tort law
Torts, sometimes called delicts, are civil wrongs. To have acted tortiously, one must have breached a duty to another person, or infringed some pre-existing legal right. A simple example might be accidentally hitting someone with a cricket ball. Under negligence law, the most common form of tort, the injured party could potentially claim compensation for his injuries from the party responsible. The principles of negligence are illustrated by Donoghue v. Stevenson. A friend of Mrs Donoghue ordered an opaque bottle of ginger beer (intended for the consumption of Mrs Donoghue) in a café in Paisley. Having consumed half of it, Mrs Donoghue poured the remainder into a tumbler. The decomposing remains of a snail floated out. She claimed to have suffered from shock, fell ill with gastroenteritis and sued the manufacturer for carelessly allowing the drink to be contaminated. The House of Lords decided that the manufacturer was liable for Mrs Donoghue's illness. Lord Atkin took a distinctly moral approach, and said,"The liability for negligence… is no doubt based
upon a general public sentiment of moral wrongdoing for which the
offender must pay… The rule that you are to love your neighbour
becomes in law, you must not injure your neighbour; and the
lawyer's question, Who is my neighbour? receives a restricted
reply. You must take reasonable care to avoid acts or omissions
which you can reasonably foresee would be likely to injure your
neighbour."
This became the basis for the four principles of
negligence; (1) Mr Stevenson owed Mrs Donoghue a duty of
care to provide safe drinks (2) he
breached his duty of care (3) the harm would not have occurred
but
for his breach and (4) his act was the proximate
cause, or not too remote a consequence, of her
harm. Under a nuisance
claim the noise could be stopped. Torts can also involve
intentional acts, such as assault,
battery or
trespass. A better
known tort is defamation,
which occurs, for example, when a newspaper makes unsupportable
allegations that damage a politician's reputation. More infamous
are economic torts, which form the basis of labour law in
some countries by making trade unions liable for strikes, when
statute does not provide immunity.
Property law
Property law governs everything that people call 'theirs'. Real property, sometimes called 'real estate' refers to ownership of land and things attached to it. Personal property, refers to everything else; movable objects, such as computers, cars, jewelry, and sandwiches, or intangible rights, such as stocks and shares. A right in rem is a right to a specific piece of property, contrasting to a right in personam which allows compensation for a loss, but not a particular thing back. Land law forms the basis for most kinds of property law, and is the most complex. It concerns mortgages, rental agreements, licences, covenants, easements and the statutory systems for land registration. Regulations on the use of personal property fall under intellectual property, company law, trusts and commercial law. An example of a basic case of most property law is Armory v. Delamirie. A chimney sweep's boy found a jewel encrusted with precious stones. He took it to a goldsmith to have it valued. The goldsmith's apprentice looked at it, sneakily removed the stones, told the boy it was worth three halfpence and that he would buy it. The boy said he would prefer the jewel back, so the apprentice gave it to him, but without the stones. The boy sued the goldsmith for his apprentice's attempt to cheat him. Lord Chief Justice Pratt ruled that even though the boy could not be said to own the jewel, he should be considered the rightful keeper until the original owner is found. In fact the apprentice and the boy both had a right of possession in the jewel (a technical concept, meaning evidence that something could belong to someone), but the boy's possessory interest was considered better, because it could be shown to be first in time. Physical possession is nine tenths of the law, but not all.This case is used to support the view of property
in common law jurisdictions, that the person who can show the best
claim to a piece of property, against any contesting party, is the
owner. By contrast, the classic civil law approach to property,
propounded by
Friedrich Carl von Savigny, is that it is a right good against
the world. Obligations, like contracts and torts are conceptualised
as rights good between individuals. The idea of property raises many further
philosophical and political issues. The English philosopher
John
Locke argued that our "lives, liberties and estates" are our
property because we own our bodies and
mix our labour with our surroundings. The idea of privately
owned property has been contentious in the view of a number of
thinkers. Pierre
Proudhon, an anarchist thinker, argued in
1840 that "property
is theft".
Equity and Trusts
Equity is a body of rules that developed in England separately from the "common law". The common law was administered by judges. The Lord Chancellor on the other hand, as the King's keeper of conscience, could overrule the judge made law if he thought it equitable to do so. This meant equity came to operate more through principles than rigid rules. For instance, whereas neither the common law nor civil law systems allow people to split the ownership from the control of one piece of property, equity allows this through an arrangement known as a 'trust'. 'Trustees' control property, whereas the 'beneficial' (or 'equitable') ownership of trust property is held by people known as 'beneficiaries'. Trustees owe duties to their beneficiaries to take good care of the entrusted property. In the early case of Keech v. Sandford a child had inherited the lease on a market in Romford, London. Mr Sandford was entrusted to look after this property until the child matured. But before then, the lease expired. The landlord had (apparently) told Mr Sandford that he did not want the child to have the renewed lease. Yet the landlord was happy (apparently) to give Mr Sandford the opportunity of the lease instead. Mr Sandford took it. When the child (now Mr Keech) grew up, he sued Mr Sandford for the profit that he had been making by getting the market's lease. Mr Sandford was meant to be trusted, but he put himself in a position of conflict of interest. The Lord Chancellor, Lord King, agreed and ordered Mr Sandford should disgorge his profits. He wrote,"I very well see, if a trustee, on the refusal to
renew, might have a lease to himself few trust-estates would be
renewed… This may seem very hard, that the trustee is the only
person of all mankind who might not have the lease; but it is very
proper that the rule should be strictly pursued and not at all
relaxed."
Of course, Lord King LC was worried that trustees
might exploit opportunities to use trust property for themselves
instead of looking after it. Business speculators using trusts had
just recently caused a stock
market crash. Strict duties for trustees made their way into
company law and were applied to directors and chief
executive officers. Another example of a trustee's duty might
be to invest property wisely or sell it. This is especially the
case for pension funds,
the most important form of trust, where investors are trustees for
people's savings until retirement. But trusts can
also be set up for charitable
purposes, famous examples being the British
Museum or the Rockefeller
Foundation.
Further disciplines
Law spreads far beyond the core subjects into virtually every area of life. Three categories are presented for convenience, though the subjects intertwine and flow into one another.- Labour law is the study of a tripartite industrial relationship between worker, employer and trade union. This involves collective bargaining regulation, and the right to strike. Individual employment law refers to workplace rights, such as health and safety or a minimum wage.
- Human rights, civil rights and human rights law are important fields to guarantee everyone basic freedoms and entitlements. These are laid down in codes such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the European Convention on Human Rights and the U.S. Bill of Rights.
- Civil procedure and criminal procedure concern the rules that courts must follow as a trial and appeals proceed. Both concern a citizen's right to a fair trial or hearing.
- Evidence law involves which materials are admissible in courts for a case to be built.
- Immigration law and nationality law concern the rights of foreigners to live and work in a nation-state that is not their own and to acquire or lose citizenship. Both also involve the right of asylum and the problem of stateless individuals.
- Social security law refers to the rights people have to social insurance, such as jobseekers' allowances or housing benefits.
- Family law covers marriage and divorce proceedings, the rights of children and rights to property and money in the event of separation.
- Commercial law covers complex contract and property law. The law of agency, insurance law, bills of exchange, insolvency and bankruptcy law and sales law are all important, and trace back to the mediæval Lex Mercatoria. The UK Sale of Goods Acts and the US Uniform Commercial Code are examples of codified common law commercial principles.
- Company law sprung from the law of trusts, on the principle of separating ownership of property and control. The law of the modern company began with the Joint Stock Companies Act, passed in the United Kingdom in 1865, which protected investors with limited liability and conferred separate legal personality.
- Intellectual property deals with patents, trademarks and copyrights. These are intangible assets: the right to protect your invention from imitation, your brand name from appropriation, or a song you wrote from performance and plagiarism.
- Restitution deals with the recovery of someone else's gain, rather than compensation for one's own loss.
- Unjust enrichment is law covering a right to retrieve property from someone that has profited unjustly at another's expense.
- Tax law involves regulations that concern value added tax, corporate tax, income tax.
- Banking law and financial regulation set minimum standards on the amounts of capital banks must hold, and rules about best practice for investment. This is to insure against the risk of economic crises, such as the Wall Street Crash of 1929.
- Regulation deals with the provision of public services and utilities. Water law is one example. Especially since privatisation became popular, private companies doing the jobs previously controlled by government have been bound by social responsibilities. Energy, gas telecomms and water are regulated industries in most OECD countries.
- Competition law, known in the U.S. as antitrust law, is an evolving field that traces as far back as Roman decrees against price fixing and the English restraint of trade doctrine. Modern competition law derives from the U.S. anti-cartel and anti-monopoly statutes (the Sherman Act and Clayton Act) of the turn of the 20th century. It is used to control businesses who attempt to use their economic influence to distort market prices at the expense of consumer welfare.
- Consumer law could include anything from regulations on unfair contractual terms and clauses to directives on airline baggage insurance.
- Environmental law is increasingly important, especially in light of the Kyoto Protocol and the potential danger of climate change. Environmental protection also serves to penalise polluters within domestic legal systems.
Legal systems
In general, legal systems around the world can be split between civil law jurisdictions, on the one hand, and systems using common law and equity, on the other. The term civil law, referring to a legal system, should not be confused with civil law as a group of legal subjects, as distinguished from criminal law or public law. A third type of legal system — still accepted by some countries in part, or even in whole — is religious law, based on scriptures and interpretations thereof. The specific system that a country follows is often determined by its history, its connection with countries abroad, and its adherence to international standards. The sources that jurisdictions recognise as authoritatively binding are the defining features of legal systems. Yet classification of different systems is a matter of form rather than substance, since similar rules often prevail.Civil law
Civil law is the legal system used in most countries around the world today. In civil law the sources recognised as authoritative are, primarily, legislation – especially codifications in constitutions or statutes passed by government – and, secondarily, custom. Codifications date back millennia, with one early example being the ancient Babylonian Codex Hammurabi, but modern civil law systems essentially derive from the legal practice of the Roman Empire, whose texts were rediscovered in medieval Europe. Roman law in the days of the Roman Republic and Empire was heavily procedural, and there was no professional legal class. Instead a lay person, iudex, was chosen to adjudicate. Precedents were not reported, so any case law that developed was disguised and almost unrecognised. Each case was to be decided afresh from the laws of the state, which mirrors the (theoretical) unimportance of judges' decisions for future cases in civil law systems today. During the 6th century AD in the Eastern Roman Empire, the Emperor Justinian codified and consolidated the laws that had existed in Rome, so that what remained was one-twentieth of the mass of legal texts from before. This became known as the Corpus Juris Civilis. As one legal historian wrote, "Justinian consciously looked back to the golden age of Roman law and aimed to restore it to the peak it had reached three centuries before." Western Europe, meanwhile, slowly slipped into the Dark Ages, and it was not until the 11th century that scholars in the University of Bologna rediscovered the texts and used them to interpret their own laws. Civil law codifications based closely on Roman law, alongside some influences from religious laws such as Canon law and Islamic law, Today countries that have civil law systems range from Russia and China to most of Central and Latin America.Common law and equity
Common law and equity are systems of law whose special distinction is the doctrine of precedent, or stare decisis (Latin for "to stand by decisions"). Alongside this "judge-made law", common law systems always have governments who pass new laws and statutes. But these are not put into a codified form. Common law comes from England and was inherited by almost every country that once belonged to the British Empire, with the exceptions of Malta, Scotland, the U.S. state of Louisiana and the Canadian province of Quebec. Common law had its beginnings in medieval England, influenced by the Norman conquest of England which introduced legal concepts and institutions from the Norman and Islamic laws. Common law further developed when the English monarchy had been weakened by the enormous cost of fighting for control over large parts of France. King John had been forced by his barons to sign a document limiting his authority to pass laws. This "great charter" or Magna Carta of 1215 also required that the King's entourage of judges hold their courts and judgments at "a certain place" rather than dispensing autocratic justice in unpredictable places about the country. A concentrated and elite group of judges acquired a dominant role in law-making under this system, and compared to its European counterparts the English judiciary became highly centralised. In 1297, for instance, while the highest court in France had fifty-one judges, the English Court of Common Pleas had five. This powerful and tight-knit judiciary gave rise to a rigid and inflexible system of common law. As a result, as time went on, increasing numbers of citizens petitioned the King to override the common law, and on the King's behalf the Lord Chancellor gave judgment to do what was equitable in a case. From the time of Sir Thomas More, the first lawyer to be appointed as Lord Chancellor, a systematic body of equity grew up alongside the rigid common law, and developed its own Court of Chancery. At first, equity was often criticised as erratic, that it "varies like the Chancellor's foot". But over time it developed solid principles, especially under Lord Eldon. In the 19th century the two systems were fused into one another. In developing the common law and equity, academic authors have always played an important part. William Blackstone, from around 1760, was the first scholar to describe and teach it. But merely in describing, scholars who sought explanations and underlying structures slowly changed the way the law actually worked.Religious law
Religious law refers to the notion that the word of God is law. Examples include the Jewish Halakha and Islamic Sharia, both of which mean the "path to follow". Christian canon law also survives in some church communities. The implication of religion for law is unalterability, because the word of God cannot be amended or legislated against by judges or governments. However religion never provides a thorough and detailed legal system. For instance, the Quran has some law, and it acts merely as a source of further law through interpretation, Qiyas (reasoning by analogy), Ijma (consensus) and precedent. This is mainly contained in a body of law and jurisprudence known as Sharia and Fiqh respectively, which had a fairly significant influence on the development of common law, In modern times, Sharia is merely an optional supplement to the civil or common law of most countries, though Saudi Arabia and Iran's whole legal systems source their law on a codified form of Sharia. During the last few decades, one of the fundamental features of the movement of Islamic resurgence has been the call to restore the Sharia, which has generated a vast amount of literature and affected world politics.Jurisdictions
Though the legal traditions described have resulted in a number of common traits across jurisdictions, each sovereign entity can have unique aspects. The lists below link to articles on individual jurisdictions, organised by geography.Legal theory
History of law
The history of law is closely connected to the development of civilizations. Ancient Egyptian law, dating as far back as 3000 BCE, had a civil code that was probably broken into twelve books. It was based on the concept of Ma'at, characterised by tradition, rhetorical speech, social equality and impartiality. By the 22nd century BC, Ur-Nammu, an ancient Sumerian ruler, formulated the first law code, consisting of casuistic statements ("if... then..."). Around 1760 BC, King Hammurabi further developed Babylonian law, by codifying and inscribing it in stone. Hammurabi placed several copies of his law code throughout the kingdom of Babylon as stelae, for the entire public to see; this became known as the Codex Hammurabi. The most intact copy of these stelae was discovered in the 19th century by British Assyriologists, and has since been fully transliterated and translated into various languages, including English, German, and French.The Old
Testament is probably the oldest body of law still relevant for
modern legal systems, dating back to 1280 BCE. It takes the form of
moral imperatives, as recommendations for a good society. Ancient
Athens, the small Greek
city-state, was the first society based on broad inclusion of the
citizenry, excluding women and the slave class from about 8th
century BCE. Athens had no legal science, and Ancient Greek has no
word for "law" as an abstract concept. Yet Ancient
Greek law contained major
constitutional innovations in the development of democracy.
Roman law was
heavily influenced by Greek teachings. It forms the bridge to the
modern legal world, over the centuries between the rise and decline
of the Roman
Empire. Roman law underwent major codification in the Corpus
Juris Civilis of Emperor Justinian I.
It was lost through the Dark Ages, but
rediscovered around the 11th century. Mediæval legal scholars began
researching the Roman codes and using their concepts. In mediæval
England,
the King's powerful judges began to develop a body of precedent,
which became the common law.
But also, a Europe-wide Lex
Mercatoria was formed, so that merchants could trade using
familiar standards, rather than the many splintered types of local
law. The Lex Mercatoria, a precursor to modern commercial law,
emphasised the freedom of contract and alienability of property. As
nationalism grew in
the 18th and 19th centuries, Lex Mercatoria was incorporated into
countries' local law under new civil codes. The French Napoleonic
Code and the German
became the most influential. As opposed to English common law,
which consists of enormous tomes of case law, codes in small books
are easy to export and for judges to apply. However, today there
are signs that civil and common law are converging. European
Union law is codified in treaties, but develops through the
precedent laid down by the
European Court of Justice.
Ancient
India and China
represent distinct traditions of law, and had historically
independent schools of legal theory and practice. The Arthashastra,
probably compiled around 100 AD (though containing some older
material), and the Manusmriti(c.
100-300 AD) were foundational treatises in India, texts that were
considered authoritative legal guidance. Manu's central philosophy
was tolerance and
Pluralism, and was cited across Southeast
Asia. This Hindu tradition,
along with Islamic law,
was supplanted by the common law when India became part of the
British
Empire. Malaysia, Brunei, Singapore
and Hong
Kong also adopted the common law. The eastern Asia legal
tradition reflects a unique blend of secular and religious
influences. Japan was the first
country to begin modernising its legal system along western lines,
by importing bits of the French, but
mostly the German Civil Code. This partly reflected Germany's
status as a rising power in the late 19th century. Similarly,
traditional
Chinese law gave way to westernisation towards the final years
of the Ch'ing
dynasty in the form of six private law codes based mainly on
the Japanese model of German law. Today
Taiwanese law retains the closest affinity to the codifications
from that period, because of the split between Chiang
Kai-shek's nationalists, who fled there, and Mao Zedong's
communists who won control of the mainland in 1949. The current
legal infrastructure in the
People's Republic of China was heavily influenced by Soviet
Socialist
law, which essentially inflates administrative law at the
expense of private law rights. Today, however, because of rapid
industrialisation China has been reforming, at least in terms of
economic (if not social and political) rights. A new contract code
in 1999 represented a turn away from administrative domination.
Furthermore, after negotiations lasting fifteen years, in 2001
China joined the World
Trade Organisation.
Philosophy of law
seealso Political philosophy The philosophy of law is also known as jurisprudence. Normative jurisprudence is essentially political philosophy and asks "what should law be?". Analytic jurisprudence, on the other hand, is a distinctive field which asks "what is law?". An early famous philosopher of law was John Austin, a student of Jeremy Bentham and first chair of law at the new University of London from 1829. Austin's utilitarian answer was that law is "commands, backed by threat of sanctions, from a sovereign, to whom people have a habit of obedience". This approach was long accepted, especially as an alternative to natural law theory. Natural lawyers, such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau, argue that human law reflects essentially moral and unchangeable laws of nature. Immanuel Kant, for instance, believed a moral imperative requires laws "be chosen as though they should hold as universal laws of nature". Austin and Bentham, following David Hume, thought this conflated what "is" and what "ought to be" the case. They believed in law's positivism, that real law is entirely separate from "morality". Kant was also criticised by Friedrich Nietzsche, who believed that law emanates from The Will to Power and cannot be labelled as "moral" or "immoral". Thus, Nietzsche criticised the principle of equality, and believed that law should be committed to freedom to engage in will to power.In 1934, the Austrian philosopher Hans Kelsen
continued the positivist tradition in his book the Pure
Theory of Law. Kelsen believed that though law is separate from
morality, it is endowed with "normativity", meaning we ought to
obey it. Whilst laws are positive "is" statements (e.g. the fine
for reversing on a highway is €500), law tells us
what we "should" do (i.e. not drive backwards). So every legal
system can be hypothesised to have a basic norm (Grundnorm)
telling us we should obey the law. Carl
Schmitt, Kelsen's major intellectual opponent, rejected
positivism, and the idea of the rule of
law, because he did not accept the primacy of abstract
normative principles over concrete political positions and
decisions. Therefore, Schmitt advocated a jurisprudence of the
exception (state of
emergency), which denied that legal norms could encompass of
all political experience. Later in the 20th century, H. L. A.
Hart attacked Austin for his simplifications and Kelsen for his
fictions in The
Concept of Law. As the chair of jurisprudence at Oxford
University, Hart argued law is a "system of rules". Rules, said
Hart, are divided into primary rules (rules of conduct) and
secondary rules (rules addressed to officials to administer primary
rules). Secondary rules are divided into rules of adjudication (to
resolve legal disputes), rules of change (allowing laws to be
varied) and the rule of recognition (allowing laws to be identified
as valid). Two of Hart's students have continued the debate since.
Ronald
Dworkin was his successor in the Chair of Jurisprudence at
Oxford and his greatest critic. In his book Law's Empire, Dworkin
attacked Hart and the positivists for their refusal to treat law as
a moral issue. Dworkin argues that law is an "interpretive
concept", that requires judges to find the best fitting and most
just solution to a legal dispute, given their constitutional
traditions. Joseph Raz, on
the other hand, has defended the positivist outlook and even
criticised Hart's 'soft social thesis' approach in The Authority of
Law. Raz argues that law is authority, identifiable purely through
social sources, without reference to moral reasoning. Any
categorisation of rules beyond their role as authoritative dispute
mediation is best left to sociology, rather than
jurisprudence.
Economic analysis of law
Economic analysis of law is an approach to legal theory that incorporates and applies the methods and ideas of economics to law. The discipline arose partly out of a critique of trade unions and U.S. antitrust law. The most influential proponents, such as Richard Posner and Oliver Williamson and the so-called Chicago School of economists and lawyers including Milton Friedman and Gary Becker, are generally advocates of deregulation and privatisation, and are hostile to state regulation or what they see as restrictions on the operation of free markets.The most prominent economic analyst of law is
1991 Nobel
Prize winner Ronald
Coase. His first major article, The
Nature of the Firm (1937), argued that the reason for the
existence of firms (companies,
partnerships, etc.) is the existence of transaction
costs. Rational
individuals trade through bilateral contracts on open markets
until the costs of transactions mean that using corporations to
produce things is more cost-effective. His second major article,
The Problem of Social Cost (1960), argued that if we lived in a
world without transaction costs, people would bargain with one
another to create the same allocation of resources, regardless of
the way a court might rule in property disputes. Coase used the
example of a nuisance
case named Sturges v. Bridgman, where a noisy sweetmaker and a
quiet doctor were neighbours and went to court to see who should
have to move. Coase said that regardless of whether the judge ruled
that the sweetmaker had to stop using his machinery, or that the
doctor had to put up with it, they could strike a mutually
beneficial bargain about
who moves house that reaches the same outcome of resource
distribution. Only the existence of transaction
costs may prevent this. So the law ought to pre-empt what would
happen, and be guided by the most efficient
solution. The idea is that law and regulation are not as important
or effective at helping people as lawyers and government planners
believe. Coase and others like him wanted a change of approach, to
put the burden of proof for positive effects on a government that
was intervening in the market, by analysing the costs of
action.
Sociology of law
Sociology of law is a diverse field of study that examines the interaction of law with society. Sociology of law overlaps with jurisprudence, economic analysis of law and more specialised subjects such as criminology. The institutions of law and the social construction of legal issues and systems are relevant areas of inquiry. Initially, legal theorists were suspicious of the discipline. Kelsen attacked one of its founders, Eugen Ehrlich, who wanted to emphasise the difference between positive law, which lawyers learn and apply, and other forms of 'law' or social norms that regulate everyday life, generally preventing conflicts from reaching lawyers and courts. Around 1900 Max Weber defined his "scientific" approach to law, identifying the "legal rational form" as a type of domination, not attributable to people but to abstract norms. Legal rationalism was his term for a body of coherent and calculable law which formed a precondition for modern political developments and the modern bureaucratic state and developed in parallel with the growth of capitalism. Another sociologist, Émile Durkheim, wrote in The Division of Labour in Society that as society becomes more complex, the body of civil law concerned primarily with restitution and compensation grows at the expense of criminal laws and penal sanctions. Other notable early legal sociologists included Hugo Sinzheimer, Theodor Geiger, Georges Gurvitch and Leon Petrażycki in Europe, and William Graham Sumner in the U.S.Legal institutions
The main institutions of law in liberal democracies are independent judiciaries and justice systems, representative legislatures or parliaments, an accountable executive, a competent and non-corrupt bureaucracy and police force, civilian control of the military, and a robust legal profession and civil society.John Locke, in
Two Treatises of Government, and
Baron de Montesquieu after him in The
Spirit of the Laws, advocated a separation
of powers between the institutions that wield political
influence, namely the judiciary, legislature and executive. Their
principle was that no person should be able to usurp all powers of
the state, in contrast to
the absolutist
theory of Thomas
Hobbes' Leviathan.
More recently, Max Weber and
many others reshaped thinking about the extensions of the state that come under the control
of the executive.
Modern military, policing and bureaucratic power over ordinary
citizens' daily lives pose special problems for accountability that
earlier writers like Locke and Montesquieu could not have foreseen.
The custom and practice of the legal profession is an important
part of people's access to justice, whilst civil society is
a term used to refer to the social institutions, communities and
partnerships that form law's political basis.
Judiciary
A judiciary is a group of judges who mediate people's disputes and determine the outcome. Most countries have a system of appeals courts, up to a supreme authority. In the U.S.A., this is the Supreme Court; in Australia, the High Court; in the UK, the House of Lords; in Germany, the Bundesverfassungsgericht; in France, the Cour de Cassation. However, for most European countries the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg may overrule national law, where EU law is relevant. The European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg allows citizens of the Council of Europe member states to bring cases to it concerning human rights issues.Some countries allow their highest judicial
authority to strike down legislation determined to be
unconstitutional.
For instance, the
United States Supreme Court struck down a Texan law forbidding
assistance to women in abortion, in Roe v.
Wade. The constitution's
fourteenth amendment was interpreted to give Americans a right
to privacy, hence a
woman's right to choose
abortion. The judiciary
is theoretically bound by the constitution, much as
legislative
bodies are. In most countries judges may only interpret
the constitution and all other laws. But in common law countries,
where matters are not constitutional, the judiciary may also create
law under the doctrine
of precedent. On the other hand, the UK, Finland and New
Zealand still assert the ideal of parliamentary
sovereignty, whereby the unelected judiciary may not overturn
law passed by a democratic legislature.
Legislature
Prominent examples of legislatures are the Houses of Parliament in London, the Congress in Washington D.C., the Bundestag in Berlin, the Duma in Moscow and the Assemblée nationale in Paris. By the principle of representative government people vote for politicians to carry out their wishes. Although countries like Israel, Greece, Sweden and China are unicameral, most countries are bicameral, meaning they have two separately appointed legislative houses. In the 'lower house' politicians are elected to represent smaller constituencies. The 'upper house' is usually elected to represent states in a federal system (as in Australia, Germany or the U.S.A.) or different voting configuration in a unitary system (as in France). In the United Kingdom the upper house is appointed by the government as a house of review. One criticism of bicameral systems with two elected chambers is that the upper and lower houses may simply mirror one another. The traditional justification of bicameralism is that an upper chamber acts as a house of review. This can minimise arbitrariness and injustice in governmental action.To pass legislation, a majority of Members
of Parliament must vote
for a bill
(proposed law) in each house. Normally there will be several
readings and amendments proposed by the different political
factions. If a country has an entrenched constitution, a special
majority for changes to the constitution will be required, making
changes to the law more difficult. A government usually leads the
process, which can be formed from Members
of Parliament (e.g. the UK or Germany). But in a
presidential system, an executive appoints a cabinet to govern from his or
her political allies
whether or not they are elected (e.g. the U.S.A. or
Brazil), and the legislature's role is reduced to either ratification or veto.
One major model is the parliamentary
systems, found in such countries as the Britain,
Italy,
Germany,
India, and
Japan. In
this system, the executive as well as the cabinet are elected into and
drawn from the parliament or other legislature, and are directly
accountable to legislature rather than the people. This executive,
often termed a prime
minister, is the head of
government, and serves while holding the confidence
of the legislature.
Parliamentary systems are marked by a head of
state (separate from the head of government), who lacks formal
political
power but symbolically enacts laws and acts as a representative
of the nation. The head of state is sometimes appointed (the
German
president), sometimes hereditary (the British
monarch) and sometimes elected by popular vote (the Austrian
president).
The other major model is the presidential
system, found in such countries as France, the United
States, and Russia. Under this
system, the the executive branch is separate from the legislature and directly
accountable to the electorate rather than the legislature. In
presidential systems, the executive (often called the president) is both the head of
state and head of government.
A semi-presidential
system melds aspects of both parliamentary and presidential
systems.
The role of the executive varies from country to
country. Usually the executive is responsible for initiating or
propose the majority of legislation (that is,
setting a legislative agenda). In presidential systems, the
executive often has the power to veto legislation. Most executives
in both systems are responsible for
Ministers
or other officials head a country's public offices, such as a
foreign
ministry or interior
ministry. The election of a different
executive is therefore capable of revolutionizing an entire
country's approach to government.
Military and police
The military and police are sometimes referred to as "the long and strong arm of the law". While military organizations have existed as long as governments themselves, a standing police force is relatively modern. Mediæval England's system of traveling criminal courts, or assizes used show trials and public executions to instill communities with fear and keep them under control. The first modern police were probably those in 17th century Paris, in the court of Louis XIV, although the Paris Prefecture of Police claim they were the world's first uniformed policemen. In 1829, after the French Revolution and Napoleon's dictatorship, a government decree created the first uniformed policemen in Paris and all other French cities, known as sergents de ville ("city sergeants"). In Britain, the Metropolitan Police Act 1829 was passed by Parliament under Home Secretary Sir Robert Peel, founding the London Metropolitan Police.Sociologist Max
Weber famously argued that the state is that which controls the
legitimate monopoly of
the means of violence.
The military and police carry out enforcement at the request of the
government or the courts. The term failed state
is used where the police and military no longer control security
and order and society moves into anarchy, the absence of government.
Bureaucracy
The word "bureaucracy" derives from the French for "office" (bureau) and Ancient Greek for "power" (kratos). Like the military and police, all of a legal system's government servants and bodies that make up the bureaucracy carry out the directives of the executive. One of the earliest references to the concept was made by Baron de Grimm, a German author who lived in France. In 1765 he wrote,"The real spirit of the laws in France is that
bureaucracy of which the late Monsieur de Gournay used to complain
so greatly; here the offices, clerks, secretaries, inspectors and
intendants are not appointed to benefit the public interest, indeed
the public interest appears to have been established so that
offices might exist."
Cynicism over "officialdom" is still common, and
the workings of public servants is typically contrasted to private
enterprise motivated by profit. In
fact private companies, especially large ones, also have
bureaucracies. Negative perceptions of "red tape" aside,
public
services such as schooling, health care, policing or public
transport are a crucial state function making public
bureaucratic action the locus of government power. Weber wrote that
the typical characteristics of modern bureaucracy are that
officials define its mission, the scope of work is bound by rules,
management is composed of career experts, who manage top down,
communicating through writing and binding public servants'
discretion with rules.
Legal profession
Lawyers give their clients advice about their legal rights and duties, and represent them in court. As the European Court of Human Rights has stated, the law should be adequately accessible to everyone and people should be able to foresee how the law affects them. In order to maintain professionalism, the practice of law is typically overseen by either a government or independent regulating body such as a bar association, bar council or law society. An aspiring practitioner must be certified by the regulating body before undertaking his practice. This usually entails a two or three year programme at a university faculty of law or a law school, earning the student a Bachelor of Laws, a Bachelor of Civil Law or a Juris Doctor degree. This course of study is followed by an entrance examination (e.g. admission to the bar). Some countries require a further vocational qualification before a person is permitted to practice law. For those wishing to become a barrister a year's pupillage under the oversight of an experienced barrister. Beyond the requirements for legal practice higher academic degrees may be pursued. Examples include a Master of Laws, a Master of Legal Studies or a Doctor of Laws.Once accredited, a lawyer will often work in a
law
firm, in a chambers
as a sole practitioner, in a government post or in a
private corporation as an internal counsel. In addition a lawyer
may become a legal researcher who provides
on-demand legal research through a commercial
service or through freelance work. Many people trained in law put
their skills to use outside the legal field entirely. Significant
to the practice of law in the common law
tradition is the
legal
research to determine the current state of the law. This
usually entails exploring case-law
reports, legal
periodicals and legislation. Law practice
also involves drafting documents such as court pleadings, persuasive briefs,
contracts, or wills and
trusts.
Negotiation and dispute
resolution skills are also important to legal practice,
depending on the field.
Civil society
The term "civil society" dates back to British philosopher John Locke. He saw civil society as people who have "a common established law and judicature to appeal to, with authority to decide controversies between them." German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel also distinguished the "state" from "civil society" (Zivilgesellschaft) in Elements of the Philosophy of Right. Hegel believed that civil society and the state were polar opposites, within the scheme of his dialectic theory of history. Civil society is necessarily a source of law, by being the basis from which people form opinions and lobby for what they believe law should be. As Australian barrister and author Geoffrey Robertson QC wrote of international law,"one of its primary modern sources is found in
the responses of ordinary men and women, and of the
non-governmental organizations which many of them support, to the
human
rights abuses they see on the television screen in their living
rooms."
Freedom
of speech, freedom
of association and many other individual rights allow people to
meet together, discuss, criticise and hold to account their
governments, from
which the basis of a deliberative
democracy is formed. The more people are involved with,
concerned by and capable of changing how political
power is exercised over their lives, the more acceptable and
legitimate the law becomes to the people. Developed political
parties, debating
clubs, trade unions,
impartial media,
business and charities
are all part of a healthy civil
society.
See also
- Main lists: List of basic law topics and List of legal topics
Notes
References
Printed sources
- Bureaucracy (Key Concepts in Political Science)
- Constitution of the Athenians by Aristotle on Wikisource. See original text in Perseus program.
- Administrative Law of the European Union, its Member States and the United States edited by F. A. M. Stroink, René Seerden
- Hart's Legal Philosophy
- Liability and Environment
- Modern Corporation and Private Property
- Law as Politics: Carl Schmitt's Critique of Liberalism
- Commentaries on the Laws of England">http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/blackstone/blacksto.htm|year=1765–69}}
- A Companion to Contemporary Political Philosophy edited by Robert E. Goodin and Philip Pettit
- Financial Structures and Economic Growth
- ">http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/700}}
- The Division of Labor in Society
- Law's Empire
- Constitutions in Crisis: Political Violence and the Rule of Law
- The Red Lily (Le lys rouge) ">http://www.online-literature.com/anatole-france/red-lily/}}
- General Principles of Civil Law
- Islam – A General Survey
- Legal Traditions of the World
- An Introduction to the Comparative Study of Private Law
- Sociology of Law
- Presidents, Parliaments and Policy
- The Origins and Evolution of Islamic Law
- Elements of the Philosophy of Right">http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/hegel/works/pr/preface.htm}}
- Leviathan
- Collins Dictionary of Sociology
- The Blackwell Dictionary of Sociology
- Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals (Translated by Mary Gregor)
- Friedrich Nietzsche and the Philosophy of Law and Polity
- A Short History of Western Legal Theory
- The Oxford Handbook of Political Institutions edited by R. A. W. Rhodes, Sarah A. Binder and Bert A. Rockman
- WorldLII - World Legal Information Institute
- AsianLII - Asian Legal Information Institute (AsianLII)
- AustLII - Australasian Legal Information Institute
- BaiLII - British and Irish Legal Information Institute
- CanLII - Canadian Legal Information Institute
- NZLII - New Zealand Legal Information Institute
- PacLII - Pacific Islands Legal Information Institute
wrongful in Afrikaans: Reg
wrongful in Arabic: قانون
wrongful in Aragonese: Dreito
wrongful in Asturian: Drechu
wrongful in Bengali: আইন
wrongful in Bashkir: Хоҡуҡ
wrongful in Bosnian: Pravo
wrongful in Breton: Gwir (lezenn)
wrongful in Bulgarian: Право
wrongful in Catalan: Dret
wrongful in Cebuano: Pamalaod
wrongful in Czech: Právo
wrongful in Corsican: Drittu
wrongful in Welsh: Cyfraith
wrongful in Danish: Jura
wrongful in German: Recht
wrongful in Modern Greek (1453-): Δίκαιο
wrongful in Spanish: Derecho
wrongful in Esperanto: Juro
wrongful in Persian: حقوق (قانونی)
wrongful in French: Droit
wrongful in Western Frisian: Rjocht
wrongful in Irish: Dlí
wrongful in Manx: Leigh
wrongful in Galician: Dereito
wrongful in Classical Chinese: 法律
wrongful in Korean: 법
wrongful in Hindi: विधि
wrongful in Croatian: Pravo
wrongful in Ido: Yuro
wrongful in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Derecto
wrongful in Icelandic: Lög
wrongful in Italian: Diritto
wrongful in Hebrew: משפטים
wrongful in Ladino: Dirito
wrongful in Latin: Ius
wrongful in Latvian: Likums
wrongful in Lithuanian: teisė
wrongful in Limburgan: Rech
wrongful in Lojban: flalu
wrongful in Hungarian: Jog
wrongful in Macedonian: Право
wrongful in Maori: Ture
wrongful in Malay (macrolanguage):
Undang-undang
wrongful in Dutch: Recht
wrongful in Japanese: 法 (法学)
wrongful in Norwegian: Rettsvitenskap
wrongful in Narom: Loué
wrongful in Polish: Prawo
wrongful in Portuguese: Direito
wrongful in Romanian: Drept
wrongful in Russian: Право
wrongful in Albanian: Ligji
wrongful in Simple English: Law
wrongful in Slovak: Právo
wrongful in Slovenian: Pravo
wrongful in Finnish: Laki
wrongful in Swedish: Juridik
wrongful in Tagalog: Batas
wrongful in Tamil: சட்டம்
wrongful in Thai: กฎหมาย
wrongful in Vietnamese: Luật pháp
wrongful in Turkish: Hukuk
wrongful in Ukrainian: Право
wrongful in Urdu: قانون
wrongful in Yiddish: געזעץ
wrongful in Contenese: 法律
wrongful in Chinese: 法律