1. J u r i s p r u d e n c e
Shubhranshu Upadhyay
shuyay@gmail.com
2. Prof Kenny
As a method Jurisprudence deals with concepts which regulates human conduct in
accordance with various values, needs and goals of a society. These values, needs and
goals vary in due course of time and with changes occurring in society. The meaning and
scope of Jurisprudence thus also changes.
According to Prof. Kenny, Definitions belong rather to the end of our knowledge than to
the beginning of it.
Austin
Science of law which concerns with analysis of concepts or its underlying principles.
Theoretical Or General Jurisprudence
Definitions
3. Allen
Existence of general Jurisprudence is possible as there are certain elements inherent in
conception of law viz. dispensation of justice, preservation of order, determination of
rights, ownership, possession etc.
Grey
Accepts but prefers term âcomparative â for âGeneralâ
Salmond
Jurisprudence generalis is not the study of legal system in general but the study of
general and fundamental principles of a particular legal system.
Salmond repudiates general jurisprudence and held â Particular is the only kind.â
For him Jurisprudence is the science of civil law.
Theoretical Or General Jurisprudence
4. Historical School Jurists
Denied general Jurisprudence. Law like language, evolution conditioned by local factors
which vary from place to place and hence only particular Jurisprudence.
Holland
For him, jurisprudence is formal science of positive law.
Formal science is that which deals with the relations which are regulated by legal rules
than with the rules themselves which regulate these relations.
Only General. Example Geology-- study of composition and structure of earth. If science
it must be general.
Salmond
Jurisprudence generalis is not the study of legal system in general but the study of
general and fundamental principles of a particular legal system.
Salmond repudiates general jurisprudence and held â Particular is the only kind.â
For him Jurisprudence is the science of civil law.
Theoretical Or General Jurisprudence
5. Austinian school OR Imperative school
âą Treats law as command of sovereign
âą Dias termed this approach as positivism and the subject matter of the approach positive law.
âą Gained prominence in 19th century.
âą Reason was the distinctive feature of 18th century juristic thought.
âą Kant, Rousseu, Locke advocated reason as the last guide and judge in every thing and sphere.
âą Benthem breaks away from Natural law and emphasized utility.
âą Benthem propounds concept of expository jurisprudence which deals with law as it is.
âą Austin takes over the subject of expository Jurisprudence and subjected it to detailed,
thorough and searching analysis.
âą His approach was secular, positive and impirical.
âą Austin propounded theory of positive law.
Analytical School
6. Analytical School
Factors of emergence
Impact of Natural Law
Reaction against airy assumptions of Natural Law school.
Principles of Natural law school were considered as supreme and according to
some writers could override man made law.
Impact of progress in physical sciences.
Physical scientists adopted the a posteriori approach from particular to general and
reject the priori approach from general to particular approach of Natural law.
Political factor: To justify power of ruling Monarch against that of other agencies
viz. feudal lords, pope etc.
7. Analytical School
Benthem
âą Can be said to be the founder of this school
âą Limits of Jurisprudence defined 1872, published in 1945.
âą He divided jurisprudence in to Expository (as it is) and censorial (ought to be).
âą Censorial indicative of Natural Law.
âą Talked of utility as a governing factor.
âą Law defined as assemblage of sign
âą declarative of volition, adopted by sovereign in a state.
âą Sovereign = any person or assemblage of persons to whose will a whole political
community obey.
âą Political community = no of persons in habit of paying obedience to a person or
assembly of person, of a known and certain description.
8. Analytical School
Exponents
In 1832 John Austinâs lectures published under the title of " Province of Jurisprudence determined".
This was the first systematic and comprehensive treatment of subject which expounded analytical
positive approach.
Austin is known as father of Analytical school.
According to him analysis was the principal method of study in Jurisprudence.
He built this foundation only on expository Jurisprudence.
To him Jurisprudence meant formal analysis of legal conceptions.
Jurisprudence
i. General
ii. Particular
General Jurisprudence
Science concerned with expression of Principal, notions and distinctions common to any system of Law.
Particular Jurisprudence
Science of any actual system of law or of any portion of it.
9. Analytical School
Exponents
Austin
ï§ Positive law is out come of state and sovereign and is different from positive morality.
ï§ Positive law is set by political superior
ï§ Positive morality is not the offspring of state and sovereign.
ï§ Science of Jurisprudence is only concerned with positive laws without regard to
goodness or badness.
ï§ Analysis of positive law by operation of logic on law without consideration to history
of ethical significance.
10. Analytical School
Exponents
Austin ignored social factors also in his analysis of law. He emphasized that by
operation of logic it is possible to find out universal element in law. E.g. notions found
common in all legal systems.
Austinâs approach, analysis and deduction are applicable where constitution is based
on parliamentary sovereignty. In India and America it does not have that relevance.
Holland differs from Austin in interpretation of law. For him laws are not command of
sovereign rather laws are rules of external human actions enforced by sovereign
political authority.
11. Analytical School
Exponents
Salmond
According to him there is nothing like universal element in law, because it is the
science of law of land and thus conditioned by local factors.
Salmond deals with law as it is.
Law is to be defined not in terms of sovereign but in terms of courts. Law emanates
from courts only. No of jurists criticized Salmond on this point
He did not agree with Austin that analysis of law can be done with the help of logic
alone. He points out that study of Jurisprudence which ignore ethical and historical
aspects is a barren study.
12. Analytical School
Basic Tenets
i. Distinction between is and ought; law and moral
ii. Concentration of positive law
iii. Law in terms of and product of state.
iv. Logic is the main instrument
v. Typical law is statute
13. Historical School
Introduction
Relations to legal history at large.
Deals with general principles governing origin and development of law and with
influences that affect law
Deals in second place with origin and development of those legal conceptions and
principles which are dealt differently in analytical Jurisprudence.
Historical Jurisprudence is the history of first principles and conceptions of legal
systems.
According to Prof Dias âHistorical school emerged as a reaction against Natural law
theory.â
14. Historical School
Introduction
Montesquieu
Laws are creations of climate, local situations, accident or imposture.
His suggestion that law should answer the needs of the time and place was a step
in the direction of new thinking.
Hugo
Law like language and manners of people forms and develops itself as suited to
circumstances. The essence of law is its acceptance, regulation and observance by
people.
Burke
Law could only be the result of gradual and organic growth.
Herder
Every nation possess its own individual character and qualities and none is
intrinsically superior to other. Any attempt to bridge this numerous manifestations
under general command of universal natural law based on reason could result in
imposing a crippling uniformity.
15. Historical School
Origin
ï§ Originated in Germany due to political changes brought about by Napoleon wars.
ï§ A need for codification of law in Germany was felt on the basis of code Napoleon
which remained in force in many parts of Germany during the period of French
domination.
ï§ Savigny opposed Thaibaut who was a supporter of codification.
ï§ Savigny had knowledge of defects of contemporary codes . In his views codes were
not suitable instrument for development of German law. His contention was that law
is a product of lives of people and manifestation of their spirits.
ï§ The source of law is general consciousness of people and can not be borrowed from
outside.
16. Historical School
Introduction
F.K.Von Savigny
ï§ Founder of Historical school
ï§ Law is a product of times the germs of which like the germs of state , exist in the
nature of man being made for society and which develop from this germ various
forms, according to environing influences which play upon it.
His works include
i. Law of possession
ii. The History of Roman law in middle ages
iii. System of modern law
iv. On the vocation of our time for legislation and Jurisprudence.
"Law grows with growth and strengthens with strength of the people and finally dies
away as the nation loses its nationality.
17. F.K.Von Savigny
The sum of this theory is that all law is first developed by custom and popular faith, next
by Jurisprudence--- every where by internal silently operating powers, not by arbitrary
will of law given.
ï§ According to Savigny nature of any particular system of law was a reflection of the
spirit of people who evolved it. Volksgeist by Puschta
ï§ All law is manifestation of common consciousness
ï§ Broad principles of system are to be found in the spirit of people and they manifest
themselves in customary law.
ï§ Customs not only precede legislation but follow it.
ï§ Legislation should always confirm to popular consciousness.
Historical School
Introduction
18. Historical School
Introduction
F.K.Von Savigny
ï§ Any law making should follow historical development.
ï§ Law is not of universal application.
ï§ The Volksgeist can not be criticized for what it is. It is the standard by which
laws, which are the conscious product of will as distinct from popular
conviction , are to be judged.
ï§ The Volksgeist was a unique, ultimate and often mystical reality which was
linked to the biological heritage of people.
ï§ All law originated in custom and only much later was created by juristic
activity.
19. Historical School
Criticism
Dias
ï§ Idea of Volksgeist is acceptable in a limited way but Savigny extrapolated it into a
sweeping universal. He treated it as a discoverable thing, but even in small groups
people hold different views on different issues and the spirit does not exist.
ï§ Transplanting Roman law in alien climate of Europe after 1000 years is inconsistent
with Savignyâs idea of Volksgeist.
ï§ Law some times used as an instrument to change the existing ideas. In 1871 Law
in context of accidents changed ideas pertaining to Railways and Factories as the
law were considered to relate to unions and industries.
ï§ Improved rules of law some times emerge as a result of conflicting and violent
struggle between conflicting interests.
ï§ Far from law being reflection of Volksgeist, the Volksgeist had been shaped by law.
20. Importance of study Jurisprudence
Lawyers bring theory and life in focus
Teachers learn to think rather than just know
Students cultivating original ideas
Foundation of all legal studies
Fundamental Principles
21. Study of Jurisprudence
Meanings
Patterson
Body of ordered knowledge deals with particular species of law
Julius Stone
Lawyers Extraversion
Ogden & Richard
Any thought or writing about law
Dias & Hughes
About concept of law, social functions or purposes of law
Kelsen
Study of hierarchy of norms. The validity of each norm depending on that of a superior norm
GC Lee
Science which endeavors to ascertain.