Marxism and the Rule of Law: Reflections After the Collapse of Communism |
| |
Authors: | Martin Krygier |
| |
Affiliation: | Martin Krygier is associate professor of law, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. |
| |
Abstract: | This article concerns the relationship between the thought of Karl Marx and the fate of law, and the rule of law, in the communist states of the Soviet Union and east and central Europe. It takes the rule of law to be primarily an attempt to institutionalize restraint on power through law, and it takes it to be realized to a far greater extent in Western liberal democracies than in once-communist states. It argues that Marx's thought offered no support for such institutionalization of restraint, but, on the contrary, considerable support to the repressive, ideological and purely instrumental uses of law and the rejection and destruction of the rule of law, which were characteristic of communism. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|