What is Wrong with the Hungarian Legal System and How to Fix it

A. Jakab
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Institutions are made up of the interplay of three components: (1) formal rules, (2) actual practices and (3) narratives. However, lawyers in post-socialist countries do not see law through institutionalist lenses, but often nurture a false and simplistic idea of the law: they consider it to be the sum of rules, disregarding often the actual practices of the rules’ addressees and narratives attached to the law (encompassing everything from the raison d’etre and goal of the institution, its symbolism, the public discourse surrounding it, and social attitudes towards the institution). This restricted view makes Hungarian lawyers blind and to a certain extent also defenceless against recent authoritarian tendencies. Institution-building has been a moderately successful feat in Hungary. To put it more pessimistically, it has partially failed since the end of socialism, in particular when it comes to actual practices and narratives. In the Hungarian context, consideration of the problems of institution-building suggests two general conclusions: on the one hand, the lack of unison among the individual elements (rules, practices, narratives) renders institutions less stable and consequently less capable of inducing compliance with the law; on the other, the institutions that have been established have failed to deliver prosperity to the political community. This paper describes the constitution-making of 2010/11 from the perspective of institution-building. This institutionalist view of the law yields two main specific findings: (1) Historical experience shows that besides honest determination, the radical institutional overhaul of a complete legal system can only be successful in the presence of external pressure, the effect of which has unfortunately decreased with Hungary’s accession to the EU. That is, institution-building should go hand-in-hand with effective international and EU obligations undertaken in more sober political moments to guarantee that the political community will not later enter into a self-destructive mode. (2) Taking elements beyond mere rules more consciously into account, such as actual practices and narratives in the realm of legislation, the application of the law and legal training would ideally result in the gradual reinforcement of substantive cultural elements. This, however, requires political action, more precisely the adjustment of formal rules. Since this is not in the interest of the incumbent decision-makers, overcoming the impasse seems unlikely for the time being.
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匈牙利法律制度有什么问题?如何解决
制度是由三个组成部分的相互作用组成的:(1)正式规则,(2)实际做法和(3)叙述。然而,后社会主义国家的律师并不通过制度主义的视角来看待法律,而是经常培养一种错误和简单的法律观念:他们认为法律是规则的总和,往往忽视了规则的对象和法律的实际实践和叙述(包括从制度的存在理由和目标,其象征意义,围绕它的公共话语,以及社会对制度的态度)。这种狭隘的观点使匈牙利的律师盲目,在某种程度上也使他们对最近的专制倾向毫无防备。匈牙利的制度建设取得了一定程度的成功。更悲观地说,自社会主义结束以来,它部分失败了,特别是在实际实践和叙述方面。在匈牙利的情况下,对体制建设问题的审议提出了两项一般性结论:一方面,个别因素(规则、惯例、叙述)之间缺乏一致使体制不那么稳定,因而不太能够促使人们遵守法律;另一方面,已建立的制度未能为政治社区带来繁荣。本文从制度建设的角度来描述2010/11年的制宪。这种制度主义的法律观点产生了两个主要的具体发现:(1)历史经验表明,除了诚实的决心之外,对完整法律体系进行彻底的制度改革只能在外部压力的存在下取得成功,不幸的是,这种压力的影响随着匈牙利加入欧盟而减弱。也就是说,机构建设应与在更清醒的政治时刻承担的有效国际和欧盟义务齐头并进,以确保政治共同体不会在以后进入自我毁灭的模式。(2)更有意识地考虑到单纯规则以外的因素,例如立法领域的实际做法和叙述,法律的适用和法律培训理想地会导致实质性文化因素的逐步加强。然而,这需要采取政治行动,更确切地说,需要调整正式规则。由于这不符合现任决策者的利益,目前看来不太可能克服僵局。
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