THE RECENTLY PUBLISHED BROCHURE ANARCHISTISCH RECHT EXPLORES ‘ANARCHIST LAW’ AS
A COLLECTIVE TERM FOR FURTHERING CRITIQUES OF THE SOCIAL AND LEGAL ORDER
~ Thom Holterman ~
Anarchism can offer an excellent framework for fundamental legal criticism.
Since anarchists critique capitalist society, which relies on oppressive laws to
maintain its existence, the addition of legal perspectives can allow for
decisive criticisms of the present social order. The two approaches do not
exclude each other; instead, anarchists can advance legal criticism without
compromise.
This aligns with what is known as ‘positive anarchy’, a term borrowed from
Proudhon. Fundamentally, it encompasses a view of society without oppressive
power and refers to order, dynamism, and rationality, in addition to mutualism
and federalism. Such views and ideas can also be found in Kropotkin and Bakunin.
Here, I would like to emphasise Clara Meijer-Wichmann (1885-1922) in particular,
as she was one of the first female jurists, challenging existing criminal law
and the entire penitentiary system over a century ago.
What I call ‘anarchist law’ here should be understood as a collective term with
plural meanings. ‘Anarchist’ refers both ideologically to ‘anti-capitalist’ and
sociologically/politically to ‘without coercion’. Referring to ‘law’ as
anarchist law thus places the term into a forward-looking perspective towards a
libertarian society. This future-oriented focus does not imply that it is new,
or without a past. Forms of anarchist law have always existed, but have remained
largely unknown.
As is evident in my first contribution in the recently-published brochure
Anarchistisch Recht, entitled ‘Law and Power in a Libertarian Perspective’, one
of the sources of law is human co-operation. This is further elaborated in my
second contribution, ‘George Gurvitch (1894-1965) and Social Law’, where his
ideas of ‘social law’ and political pluralism are discussed.
The third contribution, entitled ‘State, Law, and Legitimacy’, addresses the
foundations of that ‘other’, libertarian society, by French libertarian
activist, anarcho-syndicalist, and historian René Berthier. The fourth
contribution comes from French libertarian jurist Anne-Sophie Chambost, a
university lecturer in legal history specializing in Proudhon. She demonstrates
that anarchist law already has a history. Her text is titled ‘Anarchist Thoughts
on Law in the 19th and 20th Centuries’.
In these first four contributions, anarchism and law are seen as converging. As
already noted, this doesn’t preclude viewing the two phenomena in a divergent,
mutually-opposed sense. Law that is used to maintain the existing capitalist
society, which is precisely what anarchists are fighting against, is a main
aspect of this opposition. The Armenian physician, activist anarchist, and
author Alexander Atabekyan (1868-1933) makes clear to us that this has been the
case for a long time. His contribution, the fifth, was sent to me in a German
translation from Russian, published here under the title ‘Law and Supremacy’.
The apparent divergence between anarchism and law can be put into practice or
worked around in various ways. In the sixth contribution, I listed some of these
anarchists’ ways: ‘Apart from the Law – On Illegalists, Direct Action, Take and
Eat movement’. Finally, the seventh contribution is by French libertarian jurist
and anarcho-syndicalist Pierre Bance, who once again comprehensively examines
the ‘question of law in anarchy’ and encourages recognising ‘anarchist law’ as a
key issue.
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