Political leaders and legal thinkers across the globe have unanimously defended the rule of law as an essential, universal good. In fact, it has become “the preeminent legitimating political ideal in the world today” (Tamanaha 2004: 4), as compelling as it is seemingly self-evident: a “ubiquitous and ‘natural’ formulation” (Rajkovic 2010: 35).
Yet the rule of law eludes any clear definition. Whether the rule of law includes the protection of individual rights or ideals of democracy, whether it is to be understood in strictly formalistic terms (i.e. abiding by written legal rules and limiting law-making power), or whether it refers to the conditions for the fulfillment of humanity’s “legitimate aspirations and dignity” (International Commission of Jurists 1959: VII, in Tamanaha 2004: 2) remains open to question. What is clear, however, is that the more the rule of law is invoked (and the more money is spent on its realization worldwide), the more concerns emerge regarding its forms of implementation, especially in contexts of post-conflict and massive humanitarian responses.
Since the early 1990s, humanitarian and “transitional” settings have been underpinned by a lingua franca of combined economic and legal development in the name of the rule of law. International donors started seeing the rule of law (in terms of government accountability and transparency, and the independence of the judiciary) as indispensable for, and inseparable from, economic development and the creation of a “‘level playing field’ for economic actors” (Channell 2005: 3). The World Bank and the International Monetary Fund imposed the implementation of the rule of law as a condition of financial assistance on recipient countries, and millions have been spent on legal reforms, largely via humanitarian channels, in places such as Kosovo, Rwanda, and Afghanistan. Moreover, a renewed United Nations focus on civilian protection has led humanitarian actors to postulate a strong link between protection and the rule of law, and thus to include access to justice programs geared at displaced and war-affected populations in their postwar reconstruction efforts.
Different reasons have been offered to explain major failures in the implementation of rule of law programs in postwar contexts, ranging from arguments about the hasty transplants of legal rules from one system to another that do not sufficiently take historical and socio-cultural contexts into account; the short-term nature of most law reform and institution building projects; the excessively narrow, legal-technical focus of such projects; and a general lack of attention towards “the actual people and processes rather than the abstract categories of judge, court, civil society, stakeholder, and the like” (Garth and Dezalay 2011: 3).
Others have gone further, proposing outright critiques of the rule of law’s raison d’être, from Karl Marx’s critique of the rule of law as bourgeois ideology at the service of private property to Giorgio Agamben’s (2005) claim that the rule of law nowadays increasingly entails its exception. In a similar vein, Ugo Mattei and Laura Nader have argued that the rule of law is an imperial, hegemonic ideology that serves to justify plunder, the “often violent extraction by stronger international political actors victimizing weaker ones” (2008: 2). Such (illegal) plunder is nonetheless legitimized by claiming to advance the rule of law. Rather than being an exception to the rule, it is the “rule” of law that promotes inequality and impunity (Holston 2008). Anthropological and sociological research has also shown how neoliberal governance impacts the way the rule of law works in humanitarian theaters (De Lauri and Billaud 2016). The increasingly managerial, quantitative, technical approach to the rule of law has subordinated its proclaimed ideals of “doing good” to the formal requirements of bureaucratic accountability.
References
Agamben, G. (2005) State of Exception. University of Chicago Press.
Channell, W. (2005) Lessons Not Learned: Problems with Western Aid for Law Reform in Postcommunist Countries. Carnegie Papers: Rule of Law Series, 57.
De Lauri, A. , Billaud, J. (2016) Humanitarian Theatre: Normality and the Carnivalesque in Afghanistan. In: De Lauri A. ed. The Politics of Humanitarianism: Power, Ideology and Aid. I.B. Tauris.
Garth, B.G. , Dezalay, Y. (2011) Lawyers and the Rule of Law in an Era of Globalization. Routledge.
Holston, J. (2008) Insurgent Citizenship: Disjunctions of Democracy and Modernity in Brazil. Princeton University Press.
International Commission of Jurists (1959) The Rule of Law in a Free Society.
Mattei, U. , Nader, L. (2008) Plunder: When the Rule of Law is Illegal. Blackwell.
Rajkovic, N.M. (2010) “Global Law” and Governmentality: Reconceptualizing the “Rule of Law” as Rule “Through” Law. European Journal of International Relations, 18(1): 29–52.
Tamanaha, B. (2004) On the Rule of Law: History, Politics, Theory. Cambridge University Press.