Title of article :
The Rule of Law as an Institutionalized Wager: Constitutions, Courts and Transformative Social Dynamics in Eastern Europe
Author/Authors :
Ganev، Venelin I. نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
Throughout the 1990s Eastern Europe was arguably the region most intensely
studied and discussed by the community of scholars interested in the spread of the
Rule of Law around the world. There was little doubt at the time that the political
and institutional experiments whose ultimate goal was the establishment of democratic
constitutional orders in the former Soviet satellites constitute a distinct object
of study. This commonsensical view was supported by two kinds of
arguments that accentuated the exceptional character of post-communist transformations.
There was, first, the question whether the attempt to transplant Western models
to non-Western socio-cultural milieus is going to work at all. That new constitutions
and laws must be adopted no one seriously doubted; but that grand acts of
‘founding’ would be sufficient no one earnestly believed. Second, analysts probing
the complexities of East European politics pointed out that fledgling democratic
regimes there face a ‘rule-of-law dilemma’, namely a situation where ‘what is
deemed just is contingent and informed by prior injustice’ and ‘the value of legal
change is in tension with the value of adherence to the principle of settled legal
precedent.’ Since the ‘special conditions’ that societies emerging from the long
night of authoritarianism render conventional conception of the Rule of Law ‘inapplicable
or only partially applicable’, ‘an exceptionalist paradigm’ was necessary,
one that is more sensitive to contextual peculiarities. Should the agents of the previous
regime be punished? And if so, in accordance with what criminal laws and
pursuant to what legal procedures? Should property confiscated by previous regimes
be returned to former owners and their descendants? Would it be justified
to apply new laws retroactively in order to remedy past injustices? It was far from
clear whether such intractable questions lend themselves to just and normatively
desirable solutions compatible with an overarching commitment to the Rule of
Law.
Journal title :
Hague Journal on the Rule of Law
Journal title :
Hague Journal on the Rule of Law