4 - Legal Violence
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2013
Summary
INTRODUCTION
Constitutional violence is violence nonetheless; it crushes and kills with a steadfastness equal to a violence undisciplined by legitimacy.
This chapter analyses the relationship between violence, legitimacy and law, and constitutionalism from a theoretical perspective. The first issue that arises in the study of this question is why the people obey the law, and the role that legitimacy plays in voluntary compliance. The doctrine answers this question with various theories, such as the ‘habit of obedience’, ‘risk of punishment’ or the role of authority. After considering this issue, the chapter deals with the intimate and long-standing relationship between violence and law. The starting point is a definition of legal violence and the role that legitimacy plays in order to convert plain into legal, and therefore, legitimate violence. The open debate between Cover, Derrida, Benjamin and Sarat on one side, and Kelsen, Ross and Hart on the other, will initiate this section. Is violence part of the legal content or is it only a way to enforce or apply law? Is it an internal feature of law or an external phenomenon?
The description of the violent character of law begins with a historical analysis, starting from Hebrew law and going on to the role that violence played in the law's understanding and conceptualisation in Athens and especially in Rome. I contend that it is necessary to analyse the evolution of law and violence to achieve a comprehensive description of legal violence.
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- Information
- Constitutional ViolenceLegitimacy, Democracy and Human Rights, pp. 90 - 113Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2012