Focus
III: Two Novel Methods
Two
methodological innovations should be tested and developed further. First, the analytic of struggles is a way to
give definite direction to legal research. The analytic of struggles provides
elementary framing-devices to make problems of the law, enmeshed in society’s
power-relations, visible and analysable in a robust way. Secondly, strategic filtering of rational
reconstructions is a method of uncovering the game of power that
goes on in case files in the form of legal reasoning.
Method I: Analytic of legal struggles
What may
be called the ‘underside of the law’ is its agonistic subtext of disagreements,
confrontations and contradictions. To be able to address that region of the law,
it needs to be constituted as something researchable. A specific analytic of legal struggles is required, which makes the legal conditions of moral struggle
emerge as distinctive research objects.
Analytic of struggles is not an abstract theory of law, but a
perspective for legal investigation: its worth should be proved in proximity to
practice and through research on different substantive branches of law. The
analytic of struggles breaks any set of legal research materials into three
dimensions: struggles of individuals, of regimes and of lawyers.
– In the
dimension of individuals, the law will be seen as entering into the tactics of
actors as their means of moral struggle. Actors are individuals
placed in critical confrontation situations: one’s particular form of life is
threatened. A need emerges to struggle, not only for one’s particular
life-form, but also for one’s recognition as unique ethical subject.
– In the
dimension of regimes, social sub-systems compete in the field of law. Contradictions
between these sets of social structure exist in the background of moral
struggles. They take visible form as collisions between the behavioural
expectations (social roles) borne by the different social-structural regimes
(economic system of production, family system of love, political system of
power, religious system of values, and so on).
– In the
dimension of lawyers, the law should be capable of reproducing its conditions
of existence through an employment of its own resources (autopoiesis). The law subsists on struggles of individuals enacting
and employing those resources. Providing for such use of itself as a language
resource, the law calls for individuals to maintain their capacity for making
the difference between right and wrong.
Any
legal case is an event where all these types of struggle occur at the same time
and through the same material actions. The purpose of the analytic is to help
taking apart from each other and discerning the different dimensions of
struggle pertaining to legal practice.
Method II: strategic filtering
Another
novel method of legal analysis may be called strategic filtering of rational
reconstructions. In social science, rational reconstructions are discoveries of
such tacit conceptions and principles of a practice that appear to be immanent
to that practice as its unavoidable premises. Subsequently, these premises may be
worked out into reflexive standards of criticism of the practice
and thus fed back to the practice as its own rationality.[i]
Engaging this way with practice, researchers should try to convince practitioners
that fundamental norms are fully contained by the reality of practice. They are its necessary raison d’être. For example, if states
are fighting the injustice of terrorism with their own injustice, say, by
torturing a terrorist suspect, this would defeat their own case of legitimacy.
In a
strategic framework, such reflexive arguments are to be viewed as pragmatic arguments.
Rational reconstructions are used strategically in practical action.[ii]
Enacting and employing the legal language of struggles, an actor may resort to
rational reconstructions as more cogent reasons than others. Structures of the
legal field are receptacles of such reconstructions, but in order to realize
they must become parts of the tactic of individuals: arguments and
counterarguments. Research that employs the analytical device of strategic
filter does not aim at uncovering the tacit self-understanding of a practice, but
the strategic game of reconstruction of self-understandings. As an argument, the
rational reconstruction of what belongs to the nature of a practice – for
example, ‘in war and love there are no rules’ – places a particular point of
contention in some definite frames (love, war). It is about tinging a portrayal
with a tone.
Tones
that guide rational reconstruction in the sphere of law come notably from
spheres other than the law. They may stem from and express behavioural expectations
(social roles) pertaining to a particular sphere of life. These are
subjectivities, subject-structuring structures, imposed on individuals by
systems and regimes that prevail in the society. For examples, we may speak of
the roles of a parent, worker and the citizen, which are embedded in the social
structure of a family, a workplace and the political society. Insofar as the
law is to be seen as generator of moral resilience, one should explore the means
and ways it hands out for individuals to counter these imposed roles.
[i] Jürgen Habermas, Between Facts
and Norms: Contributions to a Discourse Theory of Law and Democracy.
Cambridge: Polity Press 1996; and ‘Discourse Ethics: Notes on a Program of
Philosophical Justification’, in Habermas:
Moral Consciousness and Communicative Action. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press
1992, 43–115.
[ii] For a radical view, see Emilios Christodoulidis, ‘Strategies of
Rupture’ in Law and Critique 20(3)
2009, 3–26.
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