| Special Workshop Title: | The Actuality of conceptual Jurisprudence |
| Author: |
Claes Peterson and Marie Sandström |
| Paper Title: | Legal Dogmatics – Past, Present and Future |
| Abstract: |
Despite decades of intense criticism,
legal dogmatics would seem to be thriving in the civil law-countries. In
fact, judging by the development of Swedish jurisprudence in the 1990’s,
it even appears to have gained momentum over the last decade. As a result
of its predominance it’s all but impossible to pursue legal studies
without at least a reference to the importance of legal dogmatics and its
method. In this context it might seem
surprising that the history of this particular brand of jurisprudence
stretches back no more than 200 years. The genesis of legal dogmatics in
the civil law-tradition is closely connected with the rise of the German
Historical School in the early 19th century. Primarily, the
doctrine of legal dogmatics was advanced by Friedrich Carl von Savigny and
his colleagues as a means to create legal unity in Germany. The underlying
factors of the emergence of legal dogmatics are however more
complicated. In a broader sense the doctrine of
legal dogmatics constituted a battering ram against the concept of natural
law and the natural lawyers of the late 18th century. The
scholars of the Historical School launched a furious attack against the
natural lawyer’s inability to assist legal practice. Since judges,
according to the Historical School, had been left to their own devices,
citizens, as a result, had suffered unpredictable and arbitrary
judgements. Instead, the Historical School maintained, jurisprudence must
be regarded as an applicable science, since only legal scholars ultimately
can guarantee the uniformity of law. This, however, presupposes that all
jurists, including legal scholars, concentrate their efforts on the only
thing they all have in common, namely positive law. In changing the focus of jurisprudence
– from natural law to positive law – the Historical School unwittingly
caused legal scholars a host of epistemological problems. By 1848 the
issue of the scientific value of jurisprudence had become the object of a
heated discussion between two prominent German jurists, Friedrich Julius
Stahl and Julius von Kirchmann. According to Kirchmann jurisprudence is of
little value to society, as well as the universities. Since positive law
is continually changing legal scholars are reduced to playing the role of
the 19th century equivalent of a bag lady, forever on the
look-out for the discards of law on the scrap yard of history. In defence
of jurisprudence, Stahl advanced a new and improved definition of positive
law; the interest of jurists, as opposed to lay-men and politicians,
mainly concerns geltendes Recht (law in force). Stahl arrived at the conclusion that
law in force can be distinguished from other aspects of legal reasoning by
its connection to the doctrine of legal sources. Only those norms that are
supported by a legal source can be considered legally relevant. Stahl’s
definition of positive law is nevertheless lined with reservations. The
concept of law in force is, according to Stahl, a fiction. Like every
other fiction it has a limited scope and, although it can’t be proven
wrong, clearly reflects as simplified and “dogmatic” representation of the
law. Subsequently jurists have to transcend the boundary lines between law
in force – the sole object of legal dogmatics - and other aspects of law
when dealing with so-called hard cases. Despite Stahl’s persuasive argument
this caveat would turn out to be short lived. The emergence of the
Begriffsjurisprudenz – conceptual jurisprudence – in Europe meant that the
notion of law in force became more of a fact than a fiction. Law, in the
form of legal concepts and principles, not only could, but also should be
set apart from society. Legal dogmatics, especially in private law, would
no longer be restrained by historical and economical conditions. Instead
the mainly descriptive jurisprudence of the Historical School was
transformed into the productive – or constructive – jurisprudence of the
Begriffsjurisprudenz. |
This page was last updated on: 2003-06-06.