Marxist Theory of Law
Marxist Theory of Law
Marxist Theory of Law
LAW
Christian Arbiol
Andrei Maghirang
John Cedric Comon
Ralph Deiparine
Introduction
Karl Marx views the notion of Marxist Law from the following perspective, Law,
morality, religion, are to [the proletariat] so many bourgeois prejudices, behind
which lurk in ambush just as many bourgeois interests.
The assumptions basic to Marxist legal theoryfirst, that God does not exist; and
second, that humans are evolving animalsdeny both the possibility of an absolute
moral code and the existence of any law grounded in any authority other than
human authority. V. I. Lenin says, In what sense do we repudiate ethics and
morality? ...In the sense in which it was preached by the bourgeoisie, who derived
ethics from Gods commandments. We, of course, say that we do not believe in
God.
L.S. Jawitsch, a modern-day Marxist legal theorist, maintains Lenins denial of
anything supernatural, saying, There are no eternal, immutable principles of law.
Therefore, Marxist law cannot be based on anything other than human rationality. In
Lenins words, We repudiate all morality taken apart from human society and
classes.
Howard Selsam explains, Marxism, which has been so often accused of seeking to
eliminate moral considerations from human life and history emphasizes rather the
moral issues involved in every situation. It does so, however, not by standing on a
false platform of absolute right, but by identifying itself with the real needs and
interests of the workers and farmers.
Marxists see law based on the will of the proletariat as flexible rather than
inconsistent, a flexibility that denies a need for a comprehensive legal system. E.B.
Pashukanis writes, We require that our legislation possess maximum elasticity. We
cannot fetter ourselves by any sort of system.
The Communist Manifesto was one of the important documents that Karl Marx and
Friedrich Engels published. He became well known because of this work. In this
document, Marx states that the law of Bourgeois was only a mere reflection of the
greed of that class. He said that [Y]our jurisprudence is but the will of your class
made into a law for all, a will, whose essential character and direction are
determined by the economic conditions of existence of your class. He was critical
with the Bourgeois Law which he believes was very oppressive as it was based on
the privatization of property. The nature of the law itself was for the promotion of
unequal rights.
A will, whose essential character and direction are determined by the
economic conditions of existence of your class The selfish misconception
that induces you to transform into eternal laws of nature and of reason, the
social forms springing from your present mode of production and form of
propertythis misconception you share with every ruling class that has
preceded you.
The law being favorable to one class, specifically the capitalists, led to the
development of a Capitalist Society in which the society itself is more accountable
for the lawlessness, rather than the individual citizens. According to Engels The
contempt for the existing social order is most conspicuous in its extreme form -that of offences against the law. In other words, those who commit crimes do not
feel any sense of remorse for their actions because they feel as though they have
no other choice but to revolt. The solution, according to Marx and Engels, is to allow
the working class to make the laws. In order to achieve such an objective, the
proletarians are justified in breaking capitalistic law because they are acting in order
to achieve equality.
Conclusion
In conclusion, Karl Marx believes that law originated from conflict between the
Bourgeoisie and the Proletariat; that the State, ostensibly to promulgate and
enforce laws, become the promoter of conflict between the two major social classes;
and in order to achieve the Socialist-Communist society, the Proletariat must initiate
a violent revolution in order to shift the balance of power from the minority
Bourgeoisie to the majority Proletariat, and that once it is achieved, the new
Communist society will promulgate laws based on the will of the Proletariat, and at
the zenith of its existence, the use of law itself will be dispensed of since there will
be no more class divisions and people at that point will live in total peace, harmony
and equality, free from any form of criminality.
REFERENCES:
http://www.allaboutworldview.org/marxist-law.htm
http://www.marktolentinolaw.com/legal-blog/marxist-jurisprudence
http://www.younglaw.net/articlesmarx/law.pdf