一个观察和一个奇怪但真实的“故事”:动物的历史审判可能告诉我们美国文化中法律的变革潜力?

IF 0.7 4区 社会学 Q2 LAW Hastings Law Journal Pub Date : 2001-03-17 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.257930
P. Berman
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引用次数: 5

摘要

很少有人会质疑,法律和法律程序是美国自我认同的核心,并深深融入我们的文化结构中。事实上,我们国家对法律的信仰经常受到批评。最近,自称“社群主义”的评论员警告说,我们对法律解决方案的坚持正在鼓励我们成为一个诉讼人的社会,他们对“权利谈话”和法律斗争的依恋阻碍了我们在社会问题上达成共识或在我们的社区中灌输共同价值观的能力。虽然对这种批评有很多可能的回应,但这篇文章提供了一个可能不太熟悉的回应。我不是简单地认为法律是一种必要的邪恶,或者是对多数主义压力的重要制衡,而是问我们是否可以设想,法律通过在不同的世界观中创造一个有用的讨论和辩论的论坛,实际上有助于促进社区的发展。为了探索使用“法律谈话”来解决社会冲突可能获得的好处,我借鉴了我之前关于中世纪和早期现代欧洲以及古希腊动物和无生命物体试验的研究。这些看似奇怪的法律程序可能提供了一个有用的思想实验,使我们能够更普遍地想象法律的三种可能的社会功能。首先,仅仅主张法律管辖权本身可能有助于界定一个共同体成员的界限。其次,法律提供了一个合理化的框架和正式的话语,鼓励建立在呼吁更广泛的哲学和法律原则的基础上的对话。此外,法律话语的仪式化本质本身可能是创伤压力时期的安慰来源。第三,也许也是最重要的一点,法律和准法律话语,特别是当它在一个文化中广泛传播时,可以为辩论和争论社会和政治问题,以及在异质社会中不可避免地存在的多种叙事中进行裁决提供有用的语言。因此,法律可以作为相互竞争的世界观参与的象征性领域。在这个愿景中,我们所谓的国家倾向于进行法律斗争,可能不是真正分裂的标志,而是对一个话语论坛讲述不同故事的建设性需求。如果法律真的能发挥这样一种生成话语的作用,那么也许我们国家持久的法律信仰并不仅仅是我们被引导去相信的那种信天翁。也许我们的信仰也是一个机会。通过为不同文化叙事之间的对话创造一个论坛和一种语言,并通过建立一种关于竞争价值观的对话文化的承诺,法律辩论可以促进后现代文化中的对话,在这种文化中,大多数历史事实都被暴露为等级制度的产物。这种对话,因为它包含了持续的自我批评和娱乐的可能性,甚至可能为建立通往转变的未来的桥梁打开空间。
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An Observation and a Strange But True 'Tale': What Might the Historical Trials of Animals Tell Us about the Transformative Potential of Law in American Culture?
Few would dispute that law and legal procedures lie at the core of American self-identity and are woven deeply into the fabric of our culture. Indeed, our nation's faith in law has frequently been the subject of criticism. Most recently, self-proclaimed "communitarian" commentators have warned that our insistence on legal solutions is encouraging us to become a society of litigants whose attachment to "rights talk" and legal battles is thwarting our ability to reach consensus on social issues or instill shared values in our communities. While there are many possible responses to such a critique, this Essay offers one that is perhaps less familiar. Instead of simply arguing that law is a necessary evil or an important counterweight to majoritarian pressures, I ask whether we can conceive of ways in which law actually helps foster community by creating a forum for useful discussion and debate among differing worldviews. In order to explore the possible benefits to be gained from using "law talk" to address societal conflicts, I draw on my prior research concerning trials of animals and inanimate objects in medieval and early modern Europe and in ancient Greece. These seemingly bizarre legal proceedings may provide a useful thought experiment that allows us to imagine three possible social functions of law more generally. First, the mere assertion of legal jurisdiction may, in and of itself, help to define the boundaries of membership in a community. Second, law provides a rationalizing framework and a formal discourse that encourages a dialogue built on appeals to broader philosophical and legal principles. In addition, the ritualized nature of legal discourse may itself be a source of comfort in times of traumatic stress. Third, and perhaps most importantly, legal and quasi-legal discourse, particularly when it is widely dispersed within a culture, may provide a useful language both for debating and contesting social and political issues and for adjudicating among the multiple narratives that are inevitably present in a heterogeneous society. Thus, law may function as a symbolic terrain of engagement for competing worldviews. In this vision, our supposed national tendency to wage legal battles may not be a sign of true divisiveness, but rather of the constructive need for a discursive forum to tell alternative stories. If law can actually play such a generative discursive role, then perhaps our nation's abiding legal faith is not solely the albatross we have been led to believe it is. Perhaps our faith is also an opportunity. By creating both a forum and a language for conversation among diverse cultural narratives, and by establishing a commitment to a culture of conversation about competing values, legal debates can foster dialogue in a postmodern culture where most historical verities have been exposed as products of hierarchy. Such dialogue, because it includes the possibility for continuous self-criticism and recreation, may even open the space for generating bridges to a transformed future.
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期刊介绍: Hastings College of the Law was founded in 1878 as the first law department of the University of California, and today is one of the top-rated law schools in the United States. Its alumni span the globe and are among the most respected lawyers, judges and business leaders today. Hastings was founded in 1878 as the first law department of the University of California and is one of the most exciting and vibrant legal education centers in the nation. Our faculty are nationally renowned as both teachers and scholars.
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