Beyond Relativism: Where Is Political Power in Legal Pluralism?
Abstract Both decentralization of state law and cultural relativism have been fundamentally embedded in legal pluralism. As a scholarly trend in law and society, it has insightfully challenged the underpinnings of analytical positivist jurisprudence. Nevertheless, a theoretical concept of political...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Theoretical Inquiries in Law 2008-07, Vol.9 (2), p.4-416 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Abstract
Both decentralization of state law and cultural relativism have been
fundamentally embedded in legal pluralism. As a scholarly trend in
law and society, it has insightfully challenged the underpinnings of
analytical positivist jurisprudence. Nevertheless, a theoretical concept
of political power has significantly been missing in research on the
plurality of legal practices in various jurisdictions. This Article aims
to critically offer a theoretical concept of political power that takes
legal decentralization and cultural relativism seriously and yet points
to how and where we should look into political power, assuming that
legal pluralism itself may be a strategy of elites and nation-states amid
globalization. First, the Article explores the contributions of legal
pluralism, and its limits, in intellectually revolting against analytical
positivist jurisprudence. Second, it explicates why a concept of political
power has been missing, and why such a concept is required for better
comprehension of legal pluralism. Third, it calls for a look into three
sites of political power in the praxis of legal pluralism: politics of
identities, non-ruling communities, and neo-liberal globalization. Last,
the Article constructs a concept of political-legal transformations that
enables us to unveil political power in the context of de-centralized
legal pluralities. Power is produced in, resides in and is generated in
the dynamic interactions between nation-states, localities and global agents. Transformative relations along these dimensions allow the
nation-state to forfeit some elements of power, both in economics and
in law, but they also enable it to maintain some essential ingredients
of political power that are often veiled in the rhetoric of globalized
pluralism.
Recommended Citation
Barzilai, Gad
(2008)
"Beyond Relativism: Where Is Political Power in Legal Pluralism?,"
Theoretical Inquiries in Law:
Vol. 9
:
No.
2, Article 4.
Available at: http://www.bepress.com/til/default/vol9/iss2/art4 |
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ISSN: | 1565-3404 1565-1509 1565-3404 |
DOI: | 10.2202/1565-3404.1191 |