Schools of Jurisprudence
Jurisprudence can be called the philosophy of law. Numbers of jurists have explained it in the general form for a better understanding of the lawmaking process. As we know that law has an unpredictable arena. Its understanding differs from one particular individual to the others. Everybody has their own perception of the law. These different perceptions can be clubbed under different schools of Jurisprudence.
- Analytical School
- Historical School
- Realist School
- Sociological School
- Philosophical School
Analytical School
John Austin is said to have set up this methodology which is sometimes referred to as Austinian School. This school believes in law is a direction from the supreme power (Sovereign). According to this School, Law is the Command of the Sovereign and owes its existence to the state and is posterior to it. The exponent of this school regards Legislation as the most important source of law. According to them, Custom has no place in law.
Austin was the one who propounded the theory of positive law but Bentham was the one who laid down its establishment. one of mainly five Schools of Jurisprudence.
Jeremy Bentham
Bentham appears to be the founder of this approach. He was a firm supporter of Lassez’s fair principle of economy. He wrote a book, âLimits of Jurisprudence definedâ which was published in 1945. He was against Judge made law; according to him, the law should be made only by the legislature. He was an individualist. He said that the function of law is to emancipate the individual from the bondage and restraint upon his freedom. The purpose of the law is to bring pleasure and avoid pain. His legal philosophy is called âUtilitarian individualismâ.
John Austin
Austin is known as the father of the English Jurisprudence and Analytical School. He wrote a book, âProvince of Jurisprudence Determinedâ. He defined law as âa rule laid down for the guidance of an intelligent being by an intelligent being having power over himâ. Law is the command of a sovereign backed by Sanction.
Historical School
According to this School, Law is a matter of unconscious and organic growth. Therefore, the law is found and not made. This school says that Law is anterior to the state and does not owe its existence to it. They say custom is the all-important source of law and is superior to legislation. This School discourages creative activities and legal reform.
Savigny
He is regarded as the originator of the Historical School. He has propounded the Volkgeist Theory. Law has its source in the general consciousness (Volkgeist) of the people. He says law develops like a language and has a national character. Law is a product of the peopleâs life- it is a manifestation of its spirit.
Volksgeist Theory
Savigny takes a shot at the law of ownership (Das Recht Des Vestiges) which was distributed in 1803 and is said to be the beginning stage of Savignyâs historical jurisprudence. He solidly trusted that all law is the confirmation of ordinary mindfulness (an indication of regular cognizance) of the general population which develops with the development and reinforces the quality of the general population and thus diminishes as the country loses its nationality. The beginning of law lies in the well-known soul of the general population which Savigny named âVolksgeistâ.
Regardless of specific criticisms, Savignyâs legal theory denoted the start of the cutting edge jurisprudence. His theory of Volksgeist translated jurisprudence as far as individualsâ will as it laid more noteworthy accentuation on the connection of law and society. Whatâs more, is that this theory came as a rebel against the eighteenth-century natural law theory and explanatory positivism.
The other eminent supporters of this School are Sir Henry Maine and Edmund Burke.
Realist School
Roscoe Pound has defined ârealismâ as âFidelity to nature, accurate reordering of the things as they are, as contrasted to things as they are imagined to be, or wished to be or as one feels they ought to be.â Basically, the evolution of the Realist school lies in the English Jurisprudence. It is regarded as a branch of the Sociological approach. Gray and O.W. Holmes were the two great jurists from whom the origin of this realist approach has been traced. Gray defined law as âWhat Judges Declareâ. Coming on to the Llewellyn, he said that Realist School is not a separate school of Jurisprudence instead it should be called Sociological Jurisprudence.
Coming on to the factors responsible for this approach are numerous. The most important one is pragmatic philosophy. They started dealing with the law with a practical approach rather than constraining them with the principles. The second most important factor which seems to have led to this thought is the organization of the judiciary in America. Eminent supporters of this School are Holmes, Gray, Jerome Frank, Llewellyn, and many more.
Sociological School
This School takes law as an instrument of social progress and treats law as a social wonder. This school studies the effect of law and society on each other. According to this school, the law is the product of the general will of society. The reasons which brought about this kind of approach are many. The historical school, the philosophical movement, and the comparative study of legal systems all in different ways contributed to the emergence of this method.
Some of the eminent supporters of this view have been discussed below:
Auguste Comte
He was the first individual who used the term âSociologyâ. His method may be called âScientific Positivismâ. Coming onto the field of legal theory it was Comte whose ideas inspired Durkheim, and who in his turn, inspired Duguit, a great sociological jurist.
Eugen Ehrlich
The core point of his thesis was that the law of community is to be found in social facts and not in the formal sources of law. According to him âLiving Lawâ is the fact that governs social life. His use of the term âSociological Jurisprudenceâ means that the law in a society should be made and administered with the utmost regard to its requirements.
Roscoe Pound
He is regarded as an âAmerican leaderâ in the field of Sociological Jurisprudence. He concentrates more on functional aspects of law due to which some writers named his approach a âfunctional schoolâ. His main thesis is that the task of law is âSocial Engineeringâ. Here âSocial Engineeringâ means a balance between the competing interests in the society.
Philosophical School
This school is also known as Moral School. The basic aim of this school is that it tries to extract the reasons why particular law has been established. Immanuel Kant, Hegel, and Grotius are some of the eminent law specialists in this School. They basically think that law is the product of human reason and its ultimate aim is to raise and praise human identity. Hegel seems to be the most persuasive scholar in the philosophical school. According to him âThe state and law both are developmentalâ. Coming on to Maine, he made a comparative study of the legal institutions of various communities and laid down a theory of the evolution of law.
Conclusion
As discussed above, Jurisprudence is a systematic study of law. It basically investigates various theories and methods of insight in respect to the law.
There are five different schools of jurisprudence, each has its own philosophy and importance in the field of law. Each has been criticized by many eminent scholars. A practical approach should be taken into consideration while studying law rather than going for a theoretical one.
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