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45 Rechtstheorie 1 (2014)

handle is hein.journals/recthori45 and id is 1 raw text is: 



RECHTSTHEORIE  45 (2014), S. 1-18
Duncker & Humblot, 12165 Berlin






        COMMUNICATIVE APPROACH AND LEGAL THEORY*

                 By Mikhail  Antonov, Andrey  Polyakov,
                   and Ilya Chestnov, Saint-Petersburg



                             I. Introduction

  Communicative   approach  to law has its prehistory in the philosophy of
law, which  is not surprising, since, according to a well-known philoso-
phical principle, ex nihilo nihil fit. This line of ideas displaying the basic
features and parameters  of law has been planted in the writings of Aris-
totle and  continued  by the  Stoics, medieval  scholastics, Grotius and
other thinkers of the Modern Age. The  basic idea of communication  is to
consider another person  as the one capable of understanding  and  inter-
acting. Moreover, such interaction (at institutional level) is considered as
a necessary condition for the existence of a human  personality and law.
Accordingly, the  communicative   approach  to  law differs significantly
from both the naturalistic and theological approaches (when  law is asso-
ciated with either Nature or God),  and from  the statist approach, when
the place of Nature  or God is taken by  the state, establishing the 'law'
by a stroke of the legislator's pen writing.
  A more  detailed description of the history of this row of ideas may be
found  in Georges Gurvitch's The Idea  of Social Law.1 Indeed, the no-
tion of communicative  nature of the law as understood by the thinkers of
the past differs dramatically from its modern counterpart, which is espe-
cially so in respect of the methodological policies and conceptual appara-


  * Ilia Chestnov prepared this Article's Chapter 1, while Mikhail Antonov and
Andrey Polyakov authored the Introduction, Chapter 2 and Conclusion thereof.
Authors would like to extend their gratitude to Professor Werner Krawietz and
other participants of the Russian-German Symposium Legal Communication in
Modern Legal System that was held on December 6th 2012 at the Law Faculty of
St. Petersburg State University, for priceless comments and suggestions during
discussion of the theses reflected in this article. This paper derives from the pre-
sentations made by the authors at the Symposium. The authors are grateful to An-
ton Petrov (LL.M. Pacific McGeorge School of Law) for his kind assistance in
translating the initial Russian texts into English.
  1 Georges Gurvitch, L'id6e du droit social, Paris 1932; see also Andrey Polyakov,
The Communicative Conception of Law: the History of Genesis and its Theoretical
Foundation, Saint Petersburg 2002 [in Russian].

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