[PDF] Dante Alighieri: Bio, Life and Questions

After reading this article you will learn about the bio, life and questions asked by Dante Alighieri.

Life and Thought of Dante Alighieri:

Dante Alighieri was born in Florence in 1265 and died in 1321. He was a man of two centuries and the most vocal antipapal. He was the great supporter of anti- papacy and imperial power.

He defended the imperial authority in its absolute form and ruthlessly criticized the hegemony of the church. In this respect, Dante stood diametrically opposite to St. Thomas and John of Salisbury.

Dante Alighieri wrote a book De Monarchia (On Monarchy) by about 1310. He was also the author of Divine Comedy. De Monarchia was the most influential anti-papalist and imperialist tract in the fourteenth century.

Dante Alighieri was a Florentine and he had gathered considerable experience in practical politics. During his exile he wandered from court to court and this enabled him to gain valuable knowledge on judicial and administrative affairs.

The anarchic condition of Italy pained him very much. Following Aristotle, he said that man could achieve his purposes only in a united and peaceful state. This could be done by a unified and powerful monarch.

A powerful monarch could claim the capacity to decide all the controversies and meet the demands of his citizens. He had no faith in the hegemony of the church. Justice was to be found in an imperial administra­tion.

He said that the state should exist for the sake of the individuals. They must have this liberty and rights and he found the dismal condition of the church in this respect. People must have a say in the management of the state.

Analysing from this angle we call Dante a democrat and also a modern thinker. But in his approach to history, canon law and theological dogma he was a medieval thinker.

Dante Alighieri was a great patriot. He realized that the papal authority was mainly responsible for never-ending dissension among the people of Italy. The church never made any sincere attempt to unite the people nor to bring about peace.

Building up of a powerful nation-state under the authority of a monarch, according to Dante Alighieri, was the only remedy to the prevailing ills from which Italy was suffering.

Like other thinkers of imperial power, Dante Alighieri thought that the power of the emperor was derived from God, and hence it was independent of the church. In all spiritual matters he admitted the authority of the church. But the two powers were united only in God.

In order to make the emperor powerful and to bring about peace and unity in the state, study of law and jurisprudence was necessary and he emphasized this. Dante was responsible for the renewed emphasis in the study of Roman law. He enveloped his thought with a theological garment.

We can say Dante Alighieri had reconciled theology, law, jurisprudence, imperial power and, above all, Aris­totelian principles. In the words of Sabine “Like Thomas, he placed his theory of the universal community within a framework of principles derived from Aristotle”.

Questions Raised by Dante Alighieri:

In his celebrated work De Monarchia Dante has raised three questions—one is, whether a world government ruled by a monarch is necessary for the welfare of the human race.

Secondly, whether the Roman people acquired world domination by right.

Thirdly, whether the authority of the emperor derives directly from God or some minister of God.

Whether Temporal Monarchy is Necessary for Welfare of the World:

The first question raised by Dante Alighieri in De Monarchia is whether the temporal monarchy is necessary for the welfare of the world. He answers the question from three different angles.

The first is the philosophical point of view. The unity of the state is of primary importance. He says “where the unity is greatest, the good is also greatest”.

Lack of unity affects the good. In his opinion, only the temporal monarchy can ensure unity, the development of the rational qualities of man is possible only in a peaceful atmosphere and this is to be achieved by the temporal monarchy.

Dante Alighieri has argued that for the settlement of disputes between the states no war is necessary.

He says, “Wherever there is a controversy, there ought to be a judgment.” This judgment is to be delivered only by the temporal monarchy. His decisions are binding on all. If there is a world government, and if all the states act according to the directives of that government, the possibility of war among the states will be much less.

It is surprising to note that more than six centuries ago this son of Florence imagined of a world government, world peace and international under­standing.

In the middle of the 20th century we established United Nations and in the last decade of the century we saw the crises with which the world organization was faced.

Dante Alighieri finally has adopted Aristotelian argument. He says that where a number of things are arranged to attain an end it behoves one of them to govern the others, and the others to submit. Take the case of an individual. His objective is to pursue happiness and he subordinates all other objectives to it. He is guided by reason and not by impulses.

In a household there is a head of the family and all the members are subordinate to the head who is normally the father. The independence of all members will invite chaos. The same thing happens in the case of city or kingdom.

When a kingdom is divided itself it is brought to desolation. The purpose of the whole human race is happiness and peace. Naturally there shall be only one guide to govern. The proper title of this office is Monarchy of Empire. He is necessary for the welfare of the world.

Dante’s world government is not an indication of uniformity. In the world government there shall be uniformity of law and government, but ethnic, cultural and linguistic differences should be accepted.

Local issues should be settled locally. The monarchy should not be burdened with these matters. Common problems and issues of wider importance needs be vested in the monarchy. In this way, Dante has attempted reconciliation between regionalism and universalism.

Whether the Roman People Were justified in Assuming the Dignity of Empire:

In answering this question Dante has again adopted Aristotelian principle which states that all men are not capable of governing others. Nature makes some men suitable for the purpose.

Similarly, all nations do not possess the capacity to govern other nations. Certain races or nations are born to govern, and certain others are to be governed. Here subjection is expedient and for the fulfilment of greater interest this is to be accepted.

He further observes it cannot be doubted that nature ordained in the world a country and a nation for universal sovereignty. This nation must perform the nature-ordained duty. In this view, Rome is the nature-ordained state to govern the entire world. He notices that record of Roman achievement is full of miracles.

Roman people was by nature ordained to empire and, therefore, it was of right that they gained empire. Dante categorically says that Romans sought empire not from greed, but for the sake of common good of the conquered as well as the conquerors.

Critics are of opinion that it is very difficult to understand what Dante exactly means by Roman people. In the thirteenth century various races lived in Rome. It is also obvious from his observation that he had no animosity against pagans who constituted a major part of Rome. Although Dante was an Ita
lian he advocated Roman supremacy.

Whether the Authority Derives Directly From God or Some Vicar or Minister of God:

This is the last question of De Monarchia. Dante’s anti-papalist idea is quite clear here. His predecessors, including St. Thomas, held that the authority of the emperor was derived from the Heaven that is God. Dante says that the Roman emperor possessed power even before the church.

Therefore, church or any priest cannot be the source of emperor’s power and authority. In Dante’s own words—the authority of the temporal monarchy comes down, with no intermediate will, from the fountain of universal authority; and this fountain, one in its unity, flows through many channels out of the abundance of goodness of God.

Dante’s anti-papalist idea is also evident in his analysis of human nature and the objective at which the individual aims. Following Aristotle, Dante says that every man has dual aims—one is the blessedness of the earthly life and the other is the blessedness of heavenly paradise.

The means of attaining these two objectives are quite different, since they are quite apart. To achieve the first aim, man resorts to reason and philosophy. Philosophers and wise men write treatises and people read these books, perfect their knowledge and earthly life.

In this respect no supernatural power comes to their assistance. We can get the blessing of heavenly paradise through the spiritual lessons. Revelations of scriptures are the only source of eternal and supernatural truths.

The church is not the source at all. Therefore, the claim of the church as the source of spiritual revelations is unfounded and unacceptable.

It is, therefore, obvious that since man has two aims, he wants two guides. The emperor is the guide for earthly blessings. He can guide him to happiness in this world, in accordance with the teaching of philosophy. Only the Supreme Pontiff leads mankind to eternal life…one cannot interfere with the other.

Before Dante two medieval philosophers—St. Augustine and St. Thomas— discussed the origin of the state. According to Augustine, the state is created by divine Providence to punish the frailty and sinfulness of man.

Naturally, he has nothing to object. St. Thomas, following Aristotle, says that the state is a natural association embodying man’s social character. Ebenstein concludes— “Dante is the first writer in the Middle Ages who ingeniously combines Augustinian and Thomistic elements”.The central idea of Dante’s political philosophy is that man needs the help of temporal authority for the fulfilment of his earthly require­ments and for this he need not run after the church or the Pope.

Upload and Share Your Article:

[PDF] Political Ideas of Cicero: Natural Law, Equality and Idea of State

This article throws light upon the three political ideas of Cicero. The political ideas are: 1. Natural Law 2. Concept of Natural Equality 3. Idea of State.

Political Idea # 1. Natural Law:

The body of Cicero’s political philosophy is composed of three related elements— a belief in natural law, natural equality and the state as natural to man. “Cicero’s true importance in the history of political thought lies in the fact that he gave to the Stoic doctrine of natural law a statement in which it was universally known throughout Western Europe from his own day down to the nineteenth century.”

He has combined the Platonic principles of right and justice as eternal and Stoic principle supremacy and universality of law as it exists in nature. The universal law of nature binds all men together.

The natural law is unchangeable and it is to be found in all peoples and in all nations. This universality of natural law constitutes the foundation of world-city. Since law of nature is supreme, none can violate it.

In Cicero’s words—True law is right reason in agreement with nature. In his opinion nature is the highest manifestation of right reason. It is universal applica­tion, unchanging and everlasting; it summons to duty by its commands and averts from wrong doing by its prohibitions.

Its commands and prohibitions always influence good men, but are without effect upon the bad. It is not a sin to try to alter this law, nor is it allowable to attempt to repeal any part of it, and it is impossible to abolish it entirely.

We cannot be free from its obligations by senate or people. There will not be different laws at Rome and at Athens, or different laws now and in the future, and unchangeable law will be valid for all nations and all times.

Cicero has brought the concept of abstract reason and natural law into immediate relation with the activity of human reason and legislation of the state. If human legislation is in conformity with reason it cannot be in inconformity with nature.

It implies that, according to Cicero, human legislation violating law of nature must be declared invalid.

When everyone shows obligation to the law of nature, there is to be justice in the state. That is, violation of natural law is violation of justice. Commenting on Cicero’s idea of natural law, Gettell has said that his commentary on natural law has become a classic because of the clarity with which he was able to express himself.

Political Idea # 2. Concept of Natural Equality:

Cicero’s concept of equality is another aspect of his political philosophy. Men are born for justice and that right is based not upon man’s opinion but upon nature. There is no difference between man and man in kind in the eye of natural law, all men are equal. So far as the learning and holding of property are concerned there is, no doubt, difference between man and man.

But in the possession of reason, in their psychological make-up and in their attitude towards good and bad, men are all equal. Man is born to get justice and in this regard no difference between men should be drawn.

All men and races of men possess the same capacity for experience and for the same kinds of experience, and all are equally capable of discriminating between right and wrong.

Commenting on Cicero’s view on natural equality, Carlyle has said that no change in political theory is as startling in its completeness as the change from Aristotle to the notion of natural equality. Aristotle also thought of equality among the citizens. But he was not prepared to award citizenship to all people.

It was confined only to selected number of persons. So Aristotle’s idea of equality was not all-embracing. Only few were equal among themselves. Cicero has viewed equality in moral perspective. All men are created by God and they are born for justice. So man- made discrimination is not only unjust but also immoral.

It is the duty of every political society to ensure certain amount of dignity to every individual. Cicero has refused the time-old idea of slavery. Slaves are neither tool nor property, they are human beings. So they have the right to just treatment and independent personality.

Political Idea # 3. Idea of State:

The purpose of Cicero in Republic is to set forth a conception of an ideal state as Plato had done in his Republic. He has not made any attempt to conceal his indebtedness to Plato.

He has adopted the same technique of dialogue. But Cicero’s state is not an imaginary organization. It is confined to Roman state and he has cited illustrations from the history of Rome.

A Commonwealth is the property of a people. But a people is not any collection of human beings brought together in any sort of way, but an assemblage of people in large numbers associated in an agreement with respect to justice and a partner­ship for the common good.

The first cause of such and association is not so much the weakness of the individual as a certain social spirit which nature has implanted in him. For man is not a solitary or unsocial creature, but born with such a nature that not even under conditions of great prosperity of every sort is he willing to be isolated from his fellowmen.

The above observation reveals certain features of Cicero’s idea of state. Cicero has designated the nature of the state as the affair or thing or property of the people. This term is quite equivalent to Commonwealth and Cicero has used this. In Cicero’s view, the state as Commonwealth is for ethical purposes and if it fails to achieve this mission it is nothing.

The state is based on agreement to share common good. Another feature of Cicero’s state is people have assembled together not guided by their weakness but by their sociable nature. Man is not a solitary animal. He loves and likes to habit with man. This is the inborn nature of man. It is the rational behaviour of men which is responsible for the foundation of state. Hence we may call it a necessary association.

It is useful for achieving common good. Cicero has said there is nothing in which human excellence can more nearly approximate the divine than in the foundation of new states or in the preservation of states already founded.

The desire to share common good is so much ardent that people have overcome all enticements to pleasure and comfort. “Cicero thus formulates a vision which is thoroughly political at the same time.” His idea of state and citizenship is in striking resemblance with that of Plato and Aristotle.

Sabine has called Cicero’s state a corporate body. Naturally, all its members will look after the advantages and disadvantages of each other. Since the state is a corporate body its authority is collective and it is derived from the people.

When the political power is properly and legally executed it will be regarded as the power of the people. That is, it is corporate power. Finally, the state and its law both are subject to God. In Cicero’s theory of state force does not occupy a very important place. Only for the sake of justice and right force can be used.

Like Polybius, Cicero has suggested three types of government—royalty, aristoc­racy and democracy. But in each form of government there is the germ of corruption and instability and this leads to the fall of government.

Only a mixed form of government is the proper guarantee of stability and corruption-free society. Cicero preferred a republican form of government as the perfect example of checks and balances for the stability and good of the political system.

In the opinion of Dunning, although Cicero followed Polybius in the theory of checks and balances, it would be wrong to assume that he did not possess any
originality of thought. Cicero’s mixed form of government is less mechanical.

“There can be no doubt that in the border region where ethics, jurisprudence and politics meet, Cicero performed a work which gives him an important place in the history of political theory.”

[PDF] Origin of the Idea of Justice

After reading this article you will learn about the Origin of the Idea of Justice:- 1. The Meaning and Origin of the Idea of Justice 2. Religion as the Origin of the Idea of Justice 3. ‘Nature’ as the Origin of the Idea of Justice 4. Economics as the Origin of the Idea of Justice 5. Ethics as the Origin of the Idea of Justice.

The Meaning and Origin of the Idea of Justice:

The root idea of the word jus, and therefore also of the words justus and justitia, is the idea of joining or fitting, the idea of a bond or tie. Primarily, the join­ing or fitting implied in this root idea is that between man and man in an organized system of human relations.

But we may also conceive of the ‘just’ and ‘justice’ as connected with, and ex­pressed in, a joining or fitting between value and value in a general sum and synthesis of values. We recognize a number of different values as necessary to an organized system of human relations. There is the value of liberty: there is the value of equality: there is the value of fraternity, or (as it may also be called, and is perhaps better called) co-operation.

All these values are present in any system of law; but they are present in different degrees at different periods of time, and there is a constant process of adjustment and readjustment between their claims. The claims of liberty have to be adjusted to those of equality; and the claims of both have also to be adjusted to those of co-operation.

From this point of view the function of justice may be said to be that of adjusting, joining, or fitting the different political values. Justice is the reconciler and the synthesis of political values: it is their union in an adjusted and integrated whole: it is, in Aristotle’s words, ‘What answers to the whole of goodness . . . being the exercise of goodness as a whole . . . towards one’s neighbour’.

We must presently inquire into each of the values. But before we can do so, it is necessary to inquire into the origin and nature of the general notion of justice—the notion of the ‘first’ or ‘total’ value in which the others are all combined; by which they are all controlled; and in virtue of which their different claims (if and so far as a conflict arises) are reconciled and adjusted.

How do we discover, and from what source do we draw, the total notion of justice—the general and controlling idea of the right and the just—which we feel that the law of the State should express? We acknowledge that justice will justify law to us; we admit that, in virtue of this justification, it finally ties and obliges us to law. But what is the source of its justifying grace and obliging power?

Four different answers may be given to that question. The first is that the source of justice and of its power is religion. The second is that the source is nature. A third is that the source is economics. The fourth is that the source is ethics. We may now proceed to examine each of these answers in turn.

Religion as the Origin of the Idea of Justice:

The medieval Church held, and the Roman Catholic Church (following the philosophy of the medieval schoolmen) still holds today, that it is God Who gives through His Church the notion , of Justice, or idea of the rule of right, which is the impersonal source of law and the sustainer of the State in its task of declaring and recognizing law. This is plainly expressed in the theory of St. Thomas Aquinas.

God Himself is always acting under an inflexible general rule of right (the lex aeterna) in the order of the universe which He has created and always continues to move.

In addition, He has also expressed (1) a particular rule of right for mankind (the lex divina) in the revelation of the Scriptures, and (2) a more general rule of right for mankind (the lex naturalis) in the disclosure of His own being which He makes continually to the innate faculty of reason implanted by Him in man.

These rules of right which God has expressed are above and behind all man-made law. It follows therefore that positive law (the lex humana)—the law imposed by human authority, and valid because so imposed—must always derive its value, and its final cogency, from conformity with the principles of ‘divine’ and ‘natural’ law. St. Thomas adds to this theory of law a parallel theory of human authority which is calculated to show how this derivation is, or may be, actually achieved.

Authority, he holds, involves three separate elements, the primordial element of its principium, or foundation; the for­mal element of its modus, or permanent constitution (monarchical, aristocratic, democratic, or ‘mixed’); and the active element of its exercitium, or actual operation at this or that moment of time by this or that body of persons.

It is the community, or people, that determines the modus: it is the community that confers—as it also controls and may even withdraw in the event of misuse—the exercitium; but it is God Himself who bestows, or we may even say is, the principium. Human authority, in its ultimate foundation, is thus an effluence of the Power of God.

Being of that nature, it will act on the principles of divine and natural law as revealed, or as disclosed to reason, by God; and it will accordingly make the positive law, which it imposes on the members of the community, in conformity with those principles.

None of the Protestant churches—not even the Calvinist— has developed a theory so logical or so comprehensive as that of St. Thomas Aquinas. But again and again they have advanced the claim that religion supplies the standard of justice which should inspire and control the law of the State.

Sometimes they have gone to the length of demanding puritanical legislation, which would translate their own religious convictions into pre­scriptions of law; sometimes, more modestly, they have sought to formulate the ideal of a ‘Christian order of politics and economics’, which should serve the general community as an expression of social opinion and social aspirations, and should affect and stimulate the development of law along with, and by the side of, other similar expressions.

We may readily admit that so far as religion is a source of ethical principles, and so far as ethical principles are the source of our notion of justice (a question which we have still to consider), religion may be counted as an ultimate source of that notion. But this is not to say that religion is an immediate source, or, even less, to say that it is the one and only source. There are a number of considerations which run counter to any such view.

For one thing, we have to remember that the State includes among its members persons who have no religious belief and do not feel or acknowledge the claims of religion to their allegiance, as well as persons who have such belief and who feel and ac­knowledge such claims. We need a principle of value behind the law of the State which will embrace and convince both sorts of persons.

For another thing, we have also to remember that religious belief creates churches, and that churches are societies which develop, in the process of time, authorities of their own.

If we make religion the foundation of justice and the origin of the rule of right which the law of the State should express, a Church-authority may claim to decide, in the last resort, whether a given law is based on the foundation of justice and expresses the rule of right; and in that case the State-authority will cease to be the final authority which declares and enforces law for the community.

Something of this sort happened in the hey-day of the medieval Church, when the Papacy claimed, as the final instance of Church-authority, to interpret and enforce an idea of justice derived from God through His
revelation in the Scrip­tures and His disclosure of His Being to the faculty of reason, and when, in the strength of this claim, it sought to challenge the positive law of the State.

Finally, and above all, we have to remember that religious belief issues in the conduct of life by standards which are higher than those of law and involve a quality of behaviour (in charity, for instance, and in chastity and temperance) such as law could not secure even if it made the attempt.

The standards of religion can only be applied in the area of voluntary life which lies outside the State; and the quality of behaviour which they involve can only be achieved if it is sought freely and without any shadow of legal compulsion. If the State attempts to draw religious standards and the quality of behaviour which they involve, into the area of the legal association, and to enforce them as the prescriptions and by the sanctions of law, it simply fails.

It may even encourage what it seeks to prevent: it may encourage, for instance, the appetite for alcohol by prohibiting its manufacture, sale, and transport. Nor is this all. By making laws which cannot be enforced, it may foster disobedience to other laws which, if they stood alone, could be, and would be, enforced without any question.

‘Nature’ as the Origin of the Idea of Justice:

When ‘nature’ is adduced as the origin of the idea of justice, the suggestion is that law has value, or may be made to have value, by being in accordance, or by being brought into accor­dance, with la nature des choses, or the natural order of things. But what is this natural order? It is not the natural order investigated by the physicist: man is not inanimate matter.

Nor is it the natural order investigated by the biologist, though the biologist includes man in his studies along with the rest of the animal world. The natural order of the biologist is an order consisting in the selection of the fittest achieved by the way of struggle and survival: it is a uniformity, or a series of uniformities, observed in the animal world; and it cannot be argued that human law will be the better for squaring with any such uniformity or series of uniformities, or that it can ever be held, on that ground, to be the expression of justice.

It may be right that the positive law of a human society should include eugenic prescriptions, which encourage the survival of ‘good’ elements and discourage the survival of ‘bad’; but such prescriptions will not be right for a human society because they square with a uniform rule, selecting the ‘fit’ and rejecting the ‘unfit’, which runs through the history of happenings in the animal world.

The ‘good’ is not the same as the ‘fit’; and a rule of happenings among animal groups cannot be the source, or the justification, of a rule of con­duct in a human society. In any case the idea of nature, and of a natural order of things, as a source of justice, is an idea for older than any development of modern natural science. It is at least as old as the Stoics, and it goes back as far as the end of the fourth century B.C. or even farther.

The Stoic conception of nature, which was transmitted to the Roman jurists and eventually to the Christian Fathers, is a con­ception belonging to a mixed world of religious belief and moral philosophy.

The word ‘nature’, as it was used in legal and political speculation from the age of the Stoic Zeno to the age of the school of Rousseau, was the keyword of a religious-ethical conception of what should be in the spiritual world, rather than a term of art denoting what actually was in the material world of substance and the flesh.

It is true that the Stoics pursued the study of cosmology rather than that of pure theology: it is true that they regarded the Godhead itself as a fiery ether or form of matter, pervading and going through all things, in virtue of its fineness, but none the less material. But though Stoicism had a material basis, it was still a spiritual creed.

What the Stoics understood by ‘Nature’ was ‘that ruling principle in the Universe which was Reason and God’. The ‘Nature’ identified with God and Reason might, indeed, be a subtle form of matter, but it was none the less a ‘ruling principle’: an imperative of, or consisting in, the Reason which man shared with God.

The Stoic canon of living ‘in agreement with nature’ was, therefore, fundamentally a canon of living ‘according to the norm which man ought to realize’. We may even say, in a paradox, that Nature was man’s art: it was man’s conception, achieved in the course of a conscious effort to fit himself into the Universe, of an ideal by which he could judge the mere given facts of his life in the past, and by which he could shape his life for the future into its rational, God-intended, ‘natural’ form.

Nature thus supplied the Stoics not only, or mainly, with a view of the order of things in the material world, but also with a creed of the spiritual order of the human world, as seen in its relation to God and in the light of His all-pervading Reason. The creed, in the form in which it was developed by Zeno and his successors, was built on a single premiss, and issued in three conclusions.

The premiss was that men, in their essential con­stitution and nature, were rational beings who were each divinae particula aurae (a ‘fragment’, as they said, or detached part of the cosmic reason), and who all together shared, if only as such ‘particles’, in the all-pervading Reason which was the constitution and nature of God.

The first conclusion drawn from this premiss was that men, being rational in their nature, should all be regarded as free and self-governing in their actions. This was the conclusion of Liberty; and Stoicism was thus the philosophy which nerved the opponents of tyranny.

The second conclusion was that man, being all in their nature rational (though some were wiser than others, and there was a distinction between the sapiens and the stultus), should all be regarded as equal in status. This was the conclusion of Equality: natura omnes homines aequales sunt; and Stoicism was thus an influence which made for the amelioration, if not the abolition, of slavery.

The third conclusion was that men, being united to one another by the common factor of reason, should all be linked together in the solidarity of a world-society—a single ‘city of Zeus’—under the control of a common law in conformity with their common nature. This was the conclusion of Fraternity; and this, in the old Greek world of multitudinous city-states and multitudinous civic laws, was the most revolutionary of the three.

The Stoic premiss and its three conclusions formed a current of thought which has flowed for 2,000 years or more, through ancient Rome and the middle Ages, through the Age of Enlighten­ment and the French Revolution, and is still flowing in our own age. This current of thought carries in its course an idea of justice, professing and claiming to be drawn from nature, which is a synthesis of the three values of liberty, equality, and fraternity.

The one question which arises here, in connexion with the course of the argument, is that of the source from which this idea of justice is actually drawn.

The conception of nature on which it rests is not a conception of physical nature (though, as we have seen, there was a physical element in the philosophy of Zeno): it is a conception of the spiritual nature of God and man; or, more exactly, it may be said to be a religious or theological conception of the nature of God, and a corresponding ethical conception of the nature of man.

Nature is not, in this context, a source of justice which is distinct from religion and from ethics: it is rather a combination and fusion of religion and ethics. In the Stoic theory of natural law, as in the theory held by the Christian Fathers and proclaimed by the sc
hoolmen of the middle Ages and the Jesuit thinkers of the Counter-Reformation, both of these sources are present.

In the theory of the secular school of natural law, during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the religious element loses its power, and the ethical element is predominant.

When that school, therefore, appeals to nature as the source of justice, its real appeal is to a code of ethics con­ceived as proceeding purely and solely from human reason and as rationally calculated to promote the sum of human happiness. Blackstone, indeed, is prepared to identify ethics and natural law: the rational pursuit of happiness, in his view, ‘is the founda­tion of what we call ethics or “natural law”.

The course of the argument has gone to show that the con­ception of nature is not a separate and original source of the idea of justice, but a source which is linked with and derived from religious belief and moral philosophy.

There was, however, a twist or skew of the conception of nature which made it appear a separate and original source of the idea of justice. ‘Nature’ was sometimes supposed to denote an historic fact: the actual condi­tion of man in the golden innocence of his prime. Men spoke of a ‘state of nature’, and imagined that state as an age of the reign of a pure law of nature.

This is a modern twist, which was un­known to the Stoics and foreign to the ideas of the Roman jurisconsults who followed the Stoics. Perhaps the twist was partly due to what may be called a verbal cause.

Words, are not only instruments of thought but also influences upon it; and the Latin word natura, when it was used to translate the Greek physic, carried with it associations of original birth and a primitive condition which were foreign to the Greek, and which, as they grew in force, made ‘nature’ a happy infancy and the ‘law of nature’ a law of early innocence.

Partly, again, the twist may also have been encouraged by Christian ideas of Eden and the state of primitive grace which preceded the fall of man. In any case, and whatever its cause, the twist meant the slewing round of an idea proposed for man’s future into a supposed condition of his past, with the added suggestion that the supposed condition of the past ought to be recovered and restored. (Men like to depict their revolutions and ventures into the future as restorations of an idealized past; and Paine, for instance, in advocating the Rights of Man, readily appeals to the time when man came with his rights from ‘the hand of his Maker’.)

If nature is thus made a fact of the past, it may be held to be a separate and independent source, an historical source, of the idea of justice. But this historical source is only an imagined source, since the fact of the past is only an imagined fact; and even if it were an actual fact at an actual point of time, no single fact or point of time in the process of secular human history can be an ideal, or the source of an ideal, though the whole of the facts of history, and all its succession of points of time, may help to suggest an ideal towards which the process is moving.

Economics as the Origin of the Idea of Justice:

With the development of modern industry, which began on the Continent in the nineteenth century, the theory began to be advanced, first by French and German thinkers, and then, from Bakunin onwards, by Russian thinkers and revolutionaries, that the origin of the idea of justice could and should be discovered in the area of economics.

Upon this theory the idea of justice is derived from the facts, or deduced from the principles, of eco­nomics. In the theory of Marx, which is a fatalistic theory of the dominance of matter and the material conditions of man’s eco­nomic activity, the idea is simply derived from the facts: indeed it can hardly be called an idea, and it is rather a fate imposed by the facts.

The positive law of the State, in any given conjuncture of economic conditions, is imposed on its members by the personal authority of the class which is dominant under those conditions; and the impersonal source of the law is similarly the inevitable imperative imposed upon that class by its own economic interest in the given conjuncture.

When the given conjuncture of con­ditions is a system of capitalistic production, the bourgeois class is dominant, and the bourgeois class, itself determined by the system, determines the law in a sense corresponding to its interest.

When the mutations of matter produce a different conjuncture, and issue in a system of socialized production, controlled by the workers themselves, the proletariate or working class is dominant in its turn, and that class determines the law, as the bourgeois class did before, under the compulsion of its own system and for the promotion of its own interest.

As long as there is a State and as long as there is law, the law of the State will be made in the interest of the strong, and the source of the notion of justice (if indeed we can speak of such a notion, or of any notion at all, in the Marxian world of material forces) will be the fact of eco­nomic strength, moving and acting as it must.

Only when the State itself disappears, and when law disappears with the State, can a form of society be attained which is common and equal for all, and involves no subjection of class to class. That form of society is communism—communism in its purity—communism at its highest. But that society will be non-political and non-legal; and being without law it will be informed by a dis­embodied spirit of justice.

That spirit has no economic origin, but consists in a sense of ‘the elementary rules of social life, known for centuries, repeated for thousands of years in all sermons’, and at the long last spontaneously obeyed as men ‘become accustomed to their observance without force’.

This is the evocation of a dens ex machina, dormant hitherto though known for centuries, and inoperative hitherto although repeated for millennia from the pulpits.

It follows that after all there is, and has been for centuries and millennia, a notion of justice based on something—whatever that something may be—other than economic strength. But this notion has never been a source of law in the past; and it will not be a source of law in the future, because the future will be without law. Its foundation remains in mist; and it is only mist itself.

The theory of Proudhon and his successors follows a very different line from that of Marx and the successors of Marx. Proudhon, it is true, drew the notion of justice from an eco­nomic source: he preached, the priority of droit economique. But he did not, like Marx, derive his notion of justice from economic facts: he deduced it from eco­nomic principles, and primarily from the great principle of mutualite.

The general conclusions which may be drawn from this principle; and the general tendency of French syndicalism, basing its theory upon the principle, to think in terms not of warring and colliding classes, but of occupational groups complementary to one another and knit together by mutual need and the bond of mutual service.

Upon this basis the notion of justice drawn from the source of economics will be a notion based on the interest not of a class of society but of the whole of society and of all its complementary groups. The legal philosophy of Duguit may be cited as an example of such a notion of justice, and of the general view of the State and its law to which that notion leads.

Duguit assumes that a national society must primarily be regarded as an economic society, and studied accordingly in the light of its economic structure and economic activities. The basic fact of such a society is the existence of different occupational groups, producing different things, but bound to one another by mutual need of one another’s products and by a consequent system of mutual exchange.

The
essential principle is therefore solidarity—a term which takes the place of Proudhon’s mutuality Solidarity has two forms. The first form is the mechanical, which is based on similarity; and here the members of one and the same group use similar capacities in order to produce in co­operation a considerably greater product than they could pro­duce in isolation.

The second form is the organic, which is based on difference; and here the members of different groups use different capacities, on a system of division of labour which entails still greater co-operation, in order to produce a vastly greater product than could otherwise be produced. It follows that the maximum of production—which is the essential aim of the society, because it brings the maximum of consumption and the maximum of enjoyment—entails the maximum of co-opera­tion.

This maximum of co-operation involves and supplies the principle of solidarity; and this principle of solidarity furnishes in turn the notion of justice, the notion of what is right in itself, the notion of value, which is the impersonal source of law. The name which Duguit gives to this notion is that of regle de droit.

This regle de droit is a conception similar to Proudhon’s droit economique; and it issues for Duguit in two imperatives, one negative and the other positive: (1) Do nothing contrary to the principle of solidarity; (2) Co-operate as far as possible in the realization of that principle.

In developing his theory Duguit proceeds to attach so great a measure of importance to the impersonal source of law, and to the need of law being inherently right in virtue of its accordance with la regle de droit, that he almost seems to obliterate any personal source.

It is the value inherent in law, rather than the validity stamped upon it by a declaratory authority, which is his concern. He may even be said to deny the existence of any real authority, and, with it, the existence of any real validity of the law declared by so-called authority.

True, there are persons called governors (gouvernants); but they only exist de facto and they are not competent de jure to promulgate binding rules. They are indeed facts, but they are only facts of force; they issue pro­nouncements or commands, but those pronouncements are in themselves no more than the dictates of force, and they only acquire validity, or impose any obligation other than that of force majeure, when they square with ‘the rule of right’ deduced from solidarity.

It follows that the governors (a term which includes all holders of political authority in any of its forms, including the members of legislatures) must be brought under ‘the rule of right’, and made subject to its control, if their acts and pronouncements are to possess any real validity and to impose any true obligation. Indeed they must be doubly brought under the rule of right, by being made subject to both of the imperatives in which it issues.

Under the first imperative, ‘Do nothing contrary to the principle of solidarity’, any rule which they make and seek to enforce in contravention of that principle, being ex hypothesis invalid, must be made inoperative by the process of judicial disallowance, or, failing that, by the process of general social negation in the ascending stages of passive, defensive, and aggressive resistance.

Under the second imperative, ‘Co-operate as far as possible in the realization of the principle of solidarity’, which is interpreted as commanding the governors to provide public assistance for the destitute, education for the ignorant, and work for the unemployed, any failure on their part to make such provision and to render the service due, being ex hypothesis  a neglect of duty, must equally be remedied by judicial redress or corrected by the process of social agitation and social pressure.

In the upshot of his argument Duguit not only seeks to make economics, and its principle of solidarity, the one impersonal source of law; he also seeks to make it the one and only source; and he eliminates, in effect, the personal source consisting in a human authority.

The elimination, indeed, is not complete: authority remains as an obstinate fact of power, however illegiti­mate its acts and its pronouncements may be; and though it is confronted by a higher regle de droit, drawn from a sovereign principle of solidarity, we can hardly be sure that the fact of power will obey the rule of right, even when the rule is backed by judicial action and supported by social pressure.

The weak­ness of Duguit’s theory, at this point, is perhaps not so much that it tends to eliminate human authority as a source of law, as that it tends to leave a powerful but possibly (or even probably) illegitimate human authority confronting a wholly legitimate but possibly powerless rule of right. But it is not this weakness or dualism of Duguit’s theory with which we are here concerned.

The question for us is not that of the relation of the governors to a rule of right founded on economics; it is the prior question of the relation between the rule of right itself and the principle of economics from which Duguit supposes it to be drawn. Is economics, or a principle of economics, or the sum of the principles of economics, the primary basis and origin of the notion of justice?

In seeking to answer that question we may be wise to begin by a summary view of the influence which economics has actually exerted, during the course of history, on the making of ordinary positive law. If economics has largely influenced, through the ages, the making of ordinary positive law, this will be a presump­tion in favour of turning to economics in order to discover a basis and origin for the idea of justice.

Is there any such presump­tion? The evidence of the past would appear to suggest that law has determined the order of economics even more than it has itself been determined by that order.

If economic factors and economic interests have partly determined the legal system of order and the legal framework of rules, it is even more true that law has furnished the whole general system of order, and the whole general framework of rules, within which, and under which, the factors and interests of economics have had to work. Positive law is a general scheme, which covers, many fields of life besides the economic.

The lawyers and legislators who have built that scheme have no doubt been influenced, at some periods and in some parts of their building, by economic interests, but the whole scheme has been built for the simple general purpose of tidying human relations and making them ship-shape and sensible; and the shaping force of this purpose has reached out into economics.

Even a rule which has originally been made under the influence of some special economic interest may come to be absorbed, in the process of time, by the shaping force of the general purpose, and may be used to protect quite other and very different interests.

The English rule or method of trust is an example. Designed originally to protect the position and property of daughters and younger sons of the upper classes, it has been shaped into a system protecting free churches and trade unions, and made to serve, in Maitland’s words, as ‘the most powerful instrument of social experimentation’.

If that is the relation of economics to positive law, we may fairly expect something similar to be true of the relation of economics to the idea of justice, and we may refuse to believe that economic principles can ever be the source (though they may be a contributory source) of our idea of what is inherently right. Take, for example, Duguit’s principle of solidarity.

It is, to begin with, an observation based on an economic fact—the fact that men increasingly co-operate as they increase produc­tion. The observation is turned into a principle: men ought to co-operate more and more in order to increase production still further; and that principle then becomes the source of the regle de droit. But eve
n in the realm of economic facts solidarity is not the only thing.

There are other things which also serve to increase production: there is, for instance, inventive skill, leading to the discovery of new and more fruitful methods of manufacture: there is also managerial ability, leading to the discovery of new and more effective ways of arranging co-operation; and both of these things suggest that individual initiative matters as well, and may even matter as much, as social solidarity, and that it too may turn into a principle which is a source of the rule of right.

Solidarity, we begin to see, cannot be the whole source of our notion of justice: taken by itself, and in itself, it cannot produce or explain the notion. A beehive has solidarity; but just because it has only the one factor of solidarity, it lacks some other factors—such as liberty of personal development—which human beings have always considered essential to the notion of justice.

Solidarity may be one value in the system of values which we call by the name of justice; and giving it the name of fraternity as the thinkers of 1789 did, we may place it accordingly by the side of liberte and egalite. But whatever name we give it, it is not the whole of the system.

The economic fact of solidarity, even when it is turned into a principle and regarded as a value, needs the complement of other values. It also needs, along with them and in common with them, some principle of unity and recon­ciliation which creates a system, gives each of the values its place in the system, and causes and explains their inclusion.

Ethics as the Origin of the Idea of Justice:

Can we find this principle in ethics? If we answer in the affirmative, the moral standard of the community, precipitated in and enforced by the general moral conscience, will be the source of a notion of justice, containing a system or synthesis of values, which will be in its turn the impersonal source of positive law.

We shall accordingly hold that if law is to have value as well as validity—value all round, and not some single ‘broken arc’ of value called by the name of ‘solidarity’ or by some other such name—it must satisfy, in the last resort, the demands of the general moral conscience, issuing and expressed in a general all- round notion of what is just and right in the conduct of human relations.

In order that law may be valid, it is enough that it should satisfy the canon of declaration, recognition, and enforce­ment by a constituted authority acting on behalf of the com­munity. In order that it may have value, over and above validity, law must also satisfy—as much as it can, and so far as its strength avails—the canon of conformity to the demands of moral conscience as expressed in the general notion of justice.

In other words, and in simpler terms, law will have value only if it expresses and realizes—so far as it can and in such ways as it can—a rule of right for human relations ultimately derived from ethics.

Here we touch a difficulty, which the provisos already stated are meant to meet in advance. Law is not ethics; and legality, or obedience to law, is not the same as morality. Law is con­cerned with external acts, and its demands are satisfied by such acts because they are all that its sanctions, themselves external acts of physical compulsion, can possibly secure.

Ethics is con­cerned not only with external acts, but also with internal motive: its essence, as Aristotle said, is ‘a state of character, concerned with choice’, which is freely determined in its choice by its own internal motive; and the demands of ethics are not satisfied unless an internal motive is present as well as an external act.

An act is legal, whatever its motive, so long as it is the act demanded by the law. An act is not moral, whatever its outward show may be, if it is not inspired by an internal motive and does not proceed from a ‘state of a character concerned with choice’. But though we must draw a distinction between the nature of ethics and the nature of law, it does not follow that such a distinction abolishes any relation.

Law and ethics are both con­cerned with what should be, and they both speak in the impera­tive mood: they both deal, in the main, with identical areas of life—marriage and its sanctities, the keeping of faith and the honoring of pledges, the duty of consideration for others, and man’s general duty to his neighbour. How shall we express their relation? We may attempt two alternative methods of expression, and seek to discover which of the two expresses the relation best.

The first method of expression is based on the fact that law is a uniform rule of action binding on all men alike. Men in general run through the whole gamut of the moral scale: some act on this, and some on that standard: one standard is lower, and another higher. What law does, it may be argued, is to establish a moral minimum which every-man must attain.

It establishes, as it were, a lowest common measure of conduct which all can compass and which can therefore be made a uniform rule of action for all. If law bids me attach and keep burning a rear light on my bicycle when I am riding it in the dark, that is a lowest common measure of consideration for others, and it may, as such, be legally imposed.

If law proceeds to fine me for riding without a rear light, it stimulates me into a disposition to obey the moral minimum—a disposition which itself is not moral (even though it results in obedience to the- moral rule of consideration for others) because it is based on the negative and non-moral factor of force, and not on the positive and moral factor of an inward motive of spontaneous considera­tion. Law, when it is so considered, may be regarded as a school­master to bring us to morality, through the enforcement of habits of action by the use of coercive discipline.

But there is an obvious objection to this view of law. A moral minimum, enforced by non-moral means, may have some rela­tion to ethics; but it is not a relation which can stand the test of scrutiny, or prove itself to be anything more than a superficial relation.

If law is connected with ethics in the sense that it is meant to enforce the rules of ethics on some sort of common standard, ought not the standard initially to be something higher than a mere minimum, and ought we not to be con­stantly engaged in screwing the strings tighter and tighter, in order to produce a fuller and truer note? And, even more, ought not the standard, whatever its pitch, to be enforced by means, such as reformatory punishment and moral education, which will themselves have a moral quality because they tend to promote a moral disposition?

These questions suggest that if once we adopt the idea that law is a moral minimum, we shall soon be led to seek to obliterate any distinction between law and ethics, and to substitute law for ethics, with the result of eliminating ethics.

We may therefore turn to another method of expressing the re­lation between law and ethics. This second method, like the first, is based on the fact that law deals only with men in the mass, and is in its nature no more than a uniform rule of action binding equally on all alike. But the corollary which we now draw from that fact is that the only thing which law can get from man in the mass is external conduct, because the only thing which it can apply to men in the mass is external force.

From this point of view, and bearing in mind the word ‘external’, we arrive at another method of expressing the relation between law and ethics. We conclude that law is related to ethics in the sense that it seeks to secure the set of external conditions necessary for moral action, or the general framework of external order in which the moral conscience can act and determine itself most easily and most freely.

Law, from this point of view, is not the lowest common measure of ethics, or the lowes
t story in the house of ethics: it is rather the best and highest set of conditions, set round the house and forming, as it were, a fence for its protection, which has to be assembled, and firmly established, before moral action can find a free space for its play and in order that moral development may unfold its energies freely.

All moral development is inevitably confronted by external obstacles or hindrances: it is the function of law ‘to remove the obstacles’ or ‘hinder the hindrances’.

The law relating to education, as it has been gradually assembled and established in England since 1870, may be cited as an example. Moral development requires—the more as the world grows older, fuller of accumulated knowledge, and fuller, too, of complications alike in the social structure and the material environment of life—a period of initiation in the fund of accumulated knowledge, and a period of introduction to all the complications of structure and environment. This initiation and introduction is what we call education. But the process of education is confronted by possible obstacles.

The State has sought by means of its law to remove those obstacles pro­gressively. First, there is the obstacle that there may not be schools enough to provide education for all. The State, which had already been acting, through the law of the budget, to aid the establishment of voluntary schools, proceeded in 1870 to establish by law an additional and general system of schools provided entirely from its own funds.

Next, there is the obstacle that parents may not be willing, if the matter is left to their choice, to send their children to school. The State, which had already enacted in 1870 that the ‘school boards’ charged with the establishment of schools might, if they wished, make atten­dance at schools compulsory in their area, proceeded by a law of 1880 to make attendance compulsory everywhere up to a given age.

Here we may say, from one point of view (the point of view of the parents), that the law established a moral minimum, by making it the legal duty of parents to do for their children, for a prescribed period, what parents are morally bound to do as long as they possibly can; but from another point of view (the point of view of the children), which is the essence of the matter, we have to say that the law removed an obstacle, and hindered a hindrance, by clearing away from their path a hurdle which would have impeded, or even blocked, their development.

Finally, there is the obstacle that parents may not have the means to pay for their children’s education, even though they are under compulsion to send their children to school. The State, which had already enacted in 1870 that ‘school boards’ might remit fees in cases of poverty, proceeded in 1891 to make remission of fees the general rule, and thus to make the compulsory period of education free and gratuitous as well as com­pulsory.

In effect, it pooled the payment of fees among all the members of the community; it removed the obstacle to a child’s development arising from his parents’ want of means by making it the legal duty of all to provide the means.

In the whole of this process the driving force and the ultimate purpose is thus the growth of the child, during and through a preliminary period of initiation and introduction, into the stature of a free and responsible moral agent. But if that is the ultimate purpose which is served by law, the fact remains that law serves the purpose only by removing obstacles, and only by securing, in virtue of such removal, the presence of the external conditions which make development possible.

The development itself must proceed from within; it must be self-moved and spontaneous; otherwise it will not be moral development. We may thus say of education, when we consider it in its essence as a process of moral development in which teachers and children co-operate, that it lies outside the law and is free from the arm of the State.

It is not the business of law, or of any legal authority, to control the inner life of the process of education. It is only the business of law, and of any legal authority (even if it be called an educa­tion authority), to secure the external conditions of a process which, in itself, is necessarily independent of law and legal authority.

It follows from the course of the argument that if we have to choose between two conceptions of law—the conception which makes the purpose of law consist in the provision of a moral minimum, and the conception which makes it consist in the maximum provision of the external conditions which make moral development possible—we are bound to choose the second, and we are bound to choose it for the simple reason that it connects law and ethics more intimately, and more truly, than the first can ever do.

Law which is conceived as a moral minimum suffers itself from being viewed as a minimum; and it makes morality suffer, by appearing to provide in its place a sort of low-grade substitute. Law which is conceived as the maximum provision of the external conditions of morality gains itself by being viewed as a maximum; and it also makes morality gain because it opens a freer field for its exercise, making it able to do its own work with less hindrance and fewer obstacles.

It may even be said, in a paradox, that we connect law and ethics the more closely, the more clearly we distinguish their provinces. We separate them clearly if we define the one as the province of voluntary self-determination, with innumerable springs of indi­vidual initiative, and the other as the province of obligatory action, governed by uniform rules flowing in their set channels from a single central source.

But we also connect the provinces which we have begun by distinguishing, and we connect them closely and intimately, if we add that it is the business of the province of law to defend and extend the province of morality —to defend it, in the present, by providing the conditions now demanded for its free play; to extend it, for the future, by increasing the provision of those conditions as new demands arise both from the development of social structure and from changes of material environment. To stand outside in self- restraint, and yet to defend with power—to be separate and yet connected—such is the relation of law to morality.

On this basis the law of the State will be careful not to diminish the area of moral autonomy in the process of extend­ing the area of legal automatism. If the State attempts to increase the area of the compulsory action—the area of law and coercion —by bringing into it actions which might have been safely left to voluntary self-determination, it is offending against the nature of law and the true relation of law to morality.

It is indeed a safe rule for the State that it should always command and enforce by law any act which ought so much to be done that it had better be done under coercion than not be done at all; but it is equally a safe rule for the State that it should not, in seeking to secure the conditions of goodness, diminish the area of goodness itself.

On the contrary, an increase of compulsion at one point should always result in a more than proportionate increase of freedom at others; for an increase of freedom which was merely equivalent to the loss involved by the change would merely leave things as they were, and afford no justification for the change which was being made. The law of education may once more be cited in evidence.

A law which makes the atten­dance of children at school compulsory brings their parents, in that respect, into the area of legal coercion, and diminishes, to that extent, the area of free goodness; but the education of the child is so vitally important a condition of his own moral develop­ment, and the total area of free goodness may be so much extended by the compulsory provision of the condition, that the price may safely be paid.

Upload and Share Your Article:

[PDF] Nature of the Division of Powers in Switzerland | Political System

After reading this article you will learn about the nature of the division of powers in Switzerland.

(i) Not a very Rigid and Fully Clear Division of Powers:

The above account of the division of powers between the Federation and the Cantons reveals that the division has been neither rigid nor fully clear.

(ii) Execution of Federal Laws by the Cantons:

In Switzerland, the federal laws relating to the federal subjects are executed and administered by the Cantonal governments.

Article 46 states that the Cantons shall implement Federal Laws in conformity with the Constitution and Statutes. It is also true of the military affairs and the main body of civil and criminal laws. The decisions of the Federal Court are executed by the Cantonal bureaucracies.

The Cantons as such execute most of the federal laws. The Federation has a limited bureaucracy with handles the administration of laws relating to only a few subjects such as customs, coinage, posts, telegraph and telephones.

(iii) Cantonal Autonomy:

The Swiss Constitution accepts the concept of Cantonal autonomy. All the Cantons have been accepted as equal members of the Swiss Federation.

Article 47 declares:

“The Federation shall respect the autonomy of Cantons.” The Cantons, as the original custodians of all powers, now exercise all powers which have not been delegated to the Federation.

In other words, the Swiss Cantons are sovereign except to the extent to which their sovereignty stands limited by the authority of the Federation.

Equal representation to the Cantons in the Senate, due role to the Cantons in the amendment process, and the system of allowing the Cantons to have their constitutions and limited armies, are some examples which highlight the recognized legal personality and autonomy of each Swiss Canton.

(iv) Some Limitations on the Swiss Cantons:

The following are the main limitations on the powers of the Cantons:

(1) No Canton can secede from the Swiss federation.

(2) No Cantonal constitution can, in any way, be inconsistent with the Federal Constitution.

(3) The constitution of a Canton has to be a republican/democratic or representative constitution.

(4) The Cantons cannot, individually or collectively, make any political treaty or alliance with any foreign country.

(5) The Federal Court has the right to exercise the power of judicial review over Cantonal laws with a view to determine whether or not these are in conformity with the Federal Constitution and laws.

(6) No Canton can restrict the free passage of armed forces through its territory.

(7) The Federation guarantees the constitutions of the Cantons.

(8) For the upkeep of law, order and security, the Federal government can send troops to any Canton.

(9) Article 49 states: Federal law takes precedence over Cantonal law. The Federation shall ensure that the Cantons respect federal laws.

These limitations clearly highlight the senior role of the Swiss Federation vis-a-vis the Cantons.

Upload and Share Your Article:

[PDF] Standing Committee of NPC | China

This article throws light upon the ten powers and functions of the Standing Committee of the NPC. Some of the powers and functions are: 1. Standing Committee and Law-Making 2. The Power of the NPC to Change the Laws of the NPC 3. Appointment-making and Electoral Functions of Standing Committee and Others.

Function # 1. Standing Committee and Law-Making:

With the exception of the law-making powers solely entrusted to the NPC (the enactment and amendment of the Basic Statutes), the Standing Committee is competent to make laws on all other subjects. The members of the Standing Committee, along with the Deputies of the NPC, participate actively in the law-­making process.

They can propose in the NPC any measure for legislation or for constitutional amendment. The Standing Committee performs a leadership role in the law-­making that the NPC undertakes. The Standing Committee independently makes laws on the subjects not exclusively reserved for the NPC.

Function # 2. The Power of the NPC to Change the Laws of the NPC:

When the NPC is not in session, the Standing Committee exercises all the law-making powers. It can even modify any statute provided the modifications do not contravene the basic principles of the statute. Here again, the Standing Committee has an upper hand in so far as it has the power to interpret the statutes.

By the exercise of its ‘interpreting power’, the Standing Committee virtually determines the nature of the statute. This power considerably strengthens the role of the Standing Committee in the legislative sphere.

Function # 3. Appointment-making and Electoral Functions of Standing Committee:

(i) When the NPC is not in session, the Standing Committee fills up the vacancies in the State Council. All electoral or appointment-making functions of the NPC are performed by the Standing Committee when the NPC is not in session.

In other words, during the absence of the NPC, the Standing Committee appoints, upon the recommendations of the Premier, Ministers and Secretary General of the State Council and the Auditor General.

(ii) Similarly, the Standing Committee exercises the power to appoint Vice-Presidents and Judges of the Supreme People’s Court, members of the Military Commissions and the Procurators of the Supreme People’s Procuratorate. However, the appointments of the Premier, the Chief Justice, and the Procurator General are the exclusive prerogatives of the NPC.

Function # 4. Power to Guide the Foreign Relations of China:

(i) The Standing Committee decides upon the appointment and recall of Chinese ambassadors and other diplomatic representatives abroad. All such appointments are made by the President of the Peoples Republic of China (PRC) on the basis of the decisions made by the Standing Committee of the NPC.

(ii) The Standing Committee decides on the ratification and abrogation of all treaties of China with foreign countries. This is done by the President of the PRC in accordance with the decisions of the Standing Committee.

(iii) The NPC has the power to take all decisions regarding war and peace. However, when the NPC is not in session these functions are performed by the Standing Committee. The Standing Committee has the responsibility to take decisions regarding general mobilization. It also decides on the issue of the enforcement of martial law in the whole of China or any part thereof.

Function # 5. Power to Grant Ranks and Titles:

The Standing Committee institutes titles and ranks for military and diplomatic personnel. It institutes state medals and titles of honour and decides on their conferment. The medals and titles are, however, conferred by the President of the PRC.

Function # 6. Power to Grant Pardons:

The Standings Committee decides all cases for the grant of special pardons to the criminals. All pardons are, in practice granted by the President of the PRC in accordance with the decisions of the Standing Committee.

Function # 7. Supervisory Powers:

The Standing Committee supervises the work of the State Council, the Central Military Commission, the Supreme People’s Court and the Supreme People’s Procuratorate.

Function # 8. Power to Review Decisions, Rules and Orders:

The Standing Committee can reject all decisions, orders and rules made by the State Council in case it finds them against of the Constitution and the law. In other words, it exercises a sort of ‘judicial review’ power over the decisions and rules made by the State Council.

Function # 9. Power Relating to the Implementation of the Constitution and the Laws:

To supervise the implementation of the Constitution and the laws is the power of the National People’s Congress. However in practice, it is mostly exercised by the Standing Committee because the NPC meets only after long intervals and only for small sessions.

Function # 10. Role in Respect of Development Plans:

Finally, the NPC has the power to approve the socio-economic developmental plans and the budget. The Standing Committee, can examine and approve partial amendments and adjustments in these plans and the budget when the NPC is not in session.

In addition to all these functions, the Standing Committee performs all such functions as may be assigned to it by the National People’s Congress.

Upload and Share Your Article:

[PDF] Separation of Powers | Essay | Government | Political Science

Here is an essay on the ‘Separation of Powers’ for class 11 and 12. Find paragraphs, long and short essays on the ‘Separation of Powers’ especially written for school and college students.

Separation of Powers


Essay Contents: 

  1. Essay on the Genesis of Separation of Powers
  2. Essay on Origin and Development of the Theory of Separation of Powers
  3. Essay on the Separation of Powers in England
  4. Essay on Separation of Powers in the USA
  5. Essay on the Separation of Powers in India
  6. Essay on Value of the Theory of Separation of Powers
  7. Essay on Criticism of the Theory of Separation of Powers

Essay # 1. The Genesis of Separation of Powers:

There are three distinct activities in every government through which the will of the people are expressed. These are legislative, executive and judicial functions of the government. Corresponding to these three activities there are three organs of the government, namely the legislature, executive and judiciary.

The legislative organ of the government makes laws, the executive enforces them and the judiciary applies them to specific cases arising out of the breach of law.

Now the question comes what should be the relation among these three departments of the government. In other words, whether there should be complete separation of powers or there should be co-ordination among them. St. Thomas Aquinas, who belonged to the medieval period, was a campaigner against the theory of separation of powers.

He said:

“The greater the unity within the government itself, the greater the likelihood of achieving unity among the people.”

In the ancient period, there was nothing like separation of powers and the King would himself make law, execute it and act as the judge. But modern governments believe in the separation of power based on the doctrine of division of labour to ensure uprightness and efficiency in the discharge of such powers.

Then comes the other question- what is meant by the doctrine of separation of powers? We have just noticed the different functions of the government, which are three in number, namely the legislative, executive and judicial. Corresponding to these three kinds of functions there are three departments, namely the legislature, the executive and the judiciary.

The legislature makes amends and repeals the laws. The function of the executive is to enforce these laws. The judiciary is entrusted with the tasks of interpreting and applying them to specific cases arising out of breach of laws.

These three types of functions or organs may be kept in the hands of one person or a body of persons. This will be a case of absence of separation of powers. It is more common in practice today to assign these three organs to three distinct bodies.

In the latter case there will be the presence of separation of powers. In the second type of division of powers the legislature will only legislate and will refrain from executing the law or interpreting it.

Similarly, the executive will only execute the law and refrain from making law or interpreting it. Likewise, the judiciary’s exclusive function will be to adjudicate and not to make or enforce law. The theory of separation of powers believes that combination of these two or three powers in one person or one set of persons will result in tyranny, as it happened in medieval Europe.


Essay # 2. Origin and Development of the Theory of Separation of Powers:

It is not possible to say precisely since when the theory of separation of powers was first propagated or experimented. The earliest known date is that of Aristotle (4th century B.C.) and Cicero (106 – 43 B.C.). In Aristotle’s view the state will have before it three functions, namely deliberative, magisterial and judicial.

A French philosopher, Jean Bodin, made a fresh emphasis on the need of separation of these three powers. He specially hammered on keeping the judiciary outside the purview of the other two organs. According to Bodin, the judiciary has a special case of remaining separate and independent of others.

The above is a hazy account of the origin and development of the doctrine of separation of powers. It was the celebrated French philosopher Charles-Louis Montesquieu (1689-1755) who was the first to scientifically study this theory so much so that this theory is associated with his name. He held out this theory in his book The Spirit of Laws published in 1748.

The reason for Montesquieu’s holding a brief for separation of power was his experience of the tyrannical regime of Louis XIV who had all-pervading powers in France.

He would identify himself with the state and would take pride in saying:

“I am the state.”

He arrogated to himself all the legislative, executive and judicial powers of France.

For Montesquieu, the doctrine of separation of power involving mutual exclusiveness of the organs of the government consists of three elements.

First, there are three organs of the government, namely legislature, executive and judiciary; second, each of these organs must work strictly within its own sphere and there ought not to be any encroachment of anyone on the other; third, if there is encroachment, it is bound to cause tyranny.

The three organs are three water-tight compartments and the functions of one cannot at all be exercised by the other. When the three organs of the state overstep the mutual exclusiveness in their functioning and seem to encroach upon each other, the question arises who is superior over whom in terms of jurisdiction and power.

According to Montesquieu, there was no civil liberty in France because of the combination of all powers in the hands of a single person.

So he emphatically observed:

“There would be an end of everything, were the same man, or the same body whether of the nobles or the people, exercise these three powers.”

His visit to England in 1730 made him see the excellent liberties enjoyed by the people of England and he construed this to the separation of powers in England. Here Montesquieu fell into error, because there was no separation of powers in England. So he erroneously concluded that civil liberty in England was safe, because the English constitution was based on the principle of separation of powers.

But the French philosopher was perfectly correct to observe:

“When the legislative and the executive powers are united in the same person or in the same body of persons, there can be no liberty, because they make tyrannical laws and execute them in a tyrannical manner. Again, if judicial authority is combined with legislative, the life and liberty of the subjects would be subjected to arbitrary control. If judiciary is joined with executive, the judge might behave with violence and oppression.”

Thus the crux of the need for a separation of powers is couched in the above observation of Montesquieu. After Montesquieu the important constitutional figures to give credence to the doctrine are Sir William Blackstone and James Madison. Both are at one with Montesquieu that only answer to the abuse of powers is the separation of powers.

Blackstone hammered home:

“Whenever the right of making and enforcing the law is vested in the same man or one and the same body of men, there can be no public liberty.”

According to Madison:

“The accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive and judicial in the same hands may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny.”


Essay # 3. Separation of Powers in England:

In England, with the immense increase in legislative business, the vast rule-making powers which the government acquires under every new law and the free use of the party whip to keep the majority in line, it is indeed the executive which exercises increasing control over the legislature.

England must have executive, legislative and judicial branches, but what is significant is that the government in England is not established according to the principle of separation of powers, since there the legislative chooses the executive, which depends upon the legislative both for power and holding of office.

So there is no separation of power in England. Yet, England has the best type of civil liberty protected and the English judges are never influenced by the executive. It shows the maturity of public opinion holding the balance even in the absence of separation of powers.


Essay # 4. Separation of Powers in the USA:

One of the basic features of the constitution of the USA is the distribution of national powers among three departments whose political and constitutional independence are guaranteed.

Thus the power of the President, for example, comes not from the congress but from the constitution. What is most important is that the personnel of each of the three branches are chosen by different procedures and hold office independently of the other branches. It is this independence of the three branches, not just the distribution of functions, which is the central feature of the American system of separation of powers.

The framers of the American constitution feared concentration of powers in a single branch. To them, separation of powers and checks and balances were desirable to prevent official tyranny and even more importantly to prevent single segment of the population – majority or minority – from gaining complete control of the government.

It was hoped that by making each branch accountable to different groups a variety of interests would be reflected. For that reason, compromises and balancing of interests became inevitable.

The doctrine of separation of powers is also described as a “sharing of powers by separate institution.” Thus each department is given a voice in the business of the other. And each is, at the same time, made dependent upon the cooperation of the others in order to accomplish its own business.

It is through this blending of powers by politically dependent branches that the doctrine of checks and balances is made effective.

The makers of the constitution of the USA accepted as an unchallengeable maxim that the only way to avoid governmental tyranny is to put the legislative, executive and judicial powers in separate departments. This separation of power is not only a political theory about the proper organisation of the government but also a doctrine of constitutional law involving the Supreme Court of the country.

It is in accordance with this principle that the federal courts decline to perform non-judicial functions. It is on this ground too that the exercise of non-legislative functions by the Congress in connection with legislative investigations are judicially ensured in the USA.


Essay # 5. Separation of Powers in India:

Justice K. Subba Rao, former Chief Justice of India, observed in the famous Golaknath case:

“The constitution of India has created three major instruments of power, namely the legislature, executive and judiciary. It demarcates their jurisdiction minutely and expects them to exercise their respective powers without overstepping their limits. They should function within the sphere allotted to them.”

Mrs. Indira Gandhi laid more emphasis on it:

“Democracy could not survive unless the three organs of the government – judiciary, legislature and executive confine their functions to their respective fields. Although unlike the American constitution, the Indian constitution does not recognise any rigid separation of powers, the political usefulness of the doctrine of separation of powers is now widely recognised.”

The constitution of India divides the three categories of executive, legislative and judicial functions. Though this division of functions is not based on the doctrine of separation of powers as in the USA, yet there is broad division of functions between the appropriate theories so that, for example, the legislature will not be entitled to arrogate to itself the judicial function.

In this connection the Supreme Court of India observed:

” The Indian constitution has not indeed recognised the doctrine of separation of powers in its absolute rigidity but the functions of the different parts or branches of the government have been sufficiently differentiated and consequently it can very well be said that our constitution does not contemplate assumption, by one organ or part of the state, of functions that essentially belong to another.


Essay # 6. Value of the Theory of Separation of Powers:

The theory of separation of powers exercised significant influence in the eighteenth century Europe. The most monumental constitutional document that came in the fashion of the separation of powers is the federal constitution of the USA of 1789. As a corollary to it was modelled some of the constitutions of the provinces of the USA.

So it is said that the practicability of the separation theory was first tried in the USA.

Herman Finer was, therefore, correct when he observed:

“The United States constitution is an essay in the separation of powers and is the most important polity in the world that operates on that principle.” In the USA the President is given exclusively the executive authority, the Congress the legislative and the Supreme Court the judicial.

So if one is to know the practical implementation of the separation of powers, for him the best model is the constitution of the USA. When monarchy was overthrown in France and a republic was established there instead, the framework of the First Republic of France was in line with the separation of powers.

The rumble of the separation of powers was heard like a thunder in the French Constituent Assembly of 1789, which declared:

“Every society in which the separation of powers is not determined has no constitution.”


Essay # 7. Criticism of the Theory of Separation of Powers:

The eighteenth century was the palmy days for the theory of separation of powers. But it faced attacks in the nineteenth century.

The following are some of the scathing criticisms of the theory:

1. The Theory of Separation of Powers Violates the Organic Unity of the Government:

The major attack on this theory of separation of power is that it attacks on the organic unity of the functions of the government and injects a kind of dissension in the governmental functions by emphasising on the demarcation of governmental powers. According to John Stuart Mill, absolute separation and independence of the governmental powers would result in frequent deadlocks and general inefficiency.

Harold J. Laski believed that separation of powers would result in confusion of powers. Herman Finer’s view is that complete separation of powers would degenerate lack of unity, harmony
and efficiency.

For R. M. MacIver:

“The line between legislative enactment and executive or judicial decision is never hard and fast.”

He pointed out that in a modern state the legislature performs some executive and judicial functions. Similarly, the executive is also endowed with some legislative and judicial, functions.

2. The Theory of Separation of Powers is Impracticable:

The constitution of the USA is the finest example of the separation of powers. There the legislative powers are exclusively given to the Congress, the executive power is the sole concern of the President and the judicial business is carried out by the Supreme Court. But in the USA also there is no water-tight separation of powers. There the President is not only the chief executive but the chief legislator also.

The senate of the USA, which is the upper house, shares with the President in some of his executive functions like making appointments and treaties. We may, therefore, accept the view of R. M. MacIver that “the absolute separation of powers prescribed by Montesquieu is obviously impossible.”

According to Montesquieu’s famous political theory, a democratic state must necessarily keep separate the three great organs of government, namely, the executive, the legislature and the judiciary. In practice, such a separation is never fully achieved and overlapping of the three functions cannot be avoided. The threads of the three powers always become intertwined to a greater or lesser extent.

The degree of separation is usually determined by the political climate of a state. Perhaps the USA comes closer to the ideal of complete separation, where it is almost nil with the totalitarian countries.

In this context De Tocqueville rightly said that the more pronounced the separation – particularly where constitutional checks and balances control the working of all three powers – the more remote is the danger of dictatorship. England is a country where the separation of power does not exist. Yet the judges of England enjoy wide independence.

3. The Theory is Unworkable in a Parliamentary System of Government:

In a parliamentary system of government the executive is responsible to the legislature as it is in England and India. So Montesquieu’s formula of keeping the legislature away from meddling in the executive is ineffective in a parliamentary government.

In England and India there is a good deal of intimacy between the executive and the legislature so much so that the executive survives on the blood donated by the legislature.

The legislature makes the executive and can unmake it also. In England the House of Lords, which is the upper house of the parliament is the highest court of law. Even the executive in England and India has a big hand in the making of laws of the land. So Montesquieu has no place in a parliamentary form of government.

4. The Theory Wrongly Suggests that all the Organs are Equal in Strength:

Montesquieu would have us believe that all the three organs of the government are equal in power. This is not correct. As a matter of fact, in all democratic countries the most powerful organ is the legislature, because it makes and unmakes the laws which are the veins of every nation. It is the legislature which acts as the springboard and dominates over other departments.

It is the legislature which acts as the mouthpiece of the people, because it is directly elected by the people.

So R. M. MacIver rightly said:

“This objection is an essential condition of all responsible governments, without which democracy cannot exist.”

Its primacy over other organs is also discernible in the fact that it controls the purse of the nation. All money bills are to be passed by the legislature and this power of the legislature is a big noose that it can tighten around the neck of other organs.

5. The Theory does not ensure Individual Liberty:

The very charm or attraction of the theory of separation of powers as propounded by Montesquieu was that it guarantees individual liberty by eliminating the abuse of powers. This is not correct. England which has no separation of powers, enjoys the fruits of democracy and civil liberty more and better than any other country of the world.

This is so because the character of the English race is one of conscience and vigilance to safeguard their own liberty. So John Stuart Mill rightly said that eternal vigilance is the price of liberty. Mill did not believe in the theory of Montesquieu that separation of power is a sure elixir to invigorate civil liberty.

Conclusion:

Complete separation of powers is neither desirable nor practicable. For the purpose of obtaining efficiency there may be specialisation of functions and to that extent there may be some kind of separation of functions. So Montesquieu should have used “separation of functions” instead of “separation of powers.”

In this context Harold J. Laski wrote:

“It is necessary to have a separation of functions which need not imply separation of personnel.”

So we may go through with the suggestion that the strict separation of powers is not only impracticable as a working principle of government but it is not to be desired in practice.

So we may conclude with the words of R. M. MacIver:

“The absolute separation of powers prescribed by Montesquieu is obviously impossible.”

We shall now go to study what should be or what is in actual practice the relation among the three organs of government:

i. Relation between the Legislature and the Executive:

In the constitutional structure, the relation that exists between the legislature and the executive is a controversial one. According to Charles-Louis Montesquieu and Sir William Blackstone, the two principal organs, namely the legislature and the executive, should be kept separate and exclusive.

But John Stuart Mill and Harold J. Laski held the contrary view that there should be coordination between the legislature and the executive.

Moreover, it is not possible to keep these two departments into two water-tight compartments. In practice, the legislature discharges some executive functions and the executive, in its turn, performs some legislative functions also. We are going to discuss them now.

(a) Executive functions of the legislature:

The legislature is prone to perform the following executive functions:

(i) The legislature has a special role in the executive field, particularly in the parliamentary form of government. As a matter of fact, the life of the executive in a cabinet form of government is totally dependent on the will of the legislature. It is the legislature which elects the executive from itself.

After election, the executive has to be responsible to the legislature. If the legislature expresses its no-confidence in the executive, the latter must resign. Thus, from birth to its death, the executive is tied to the chariot-wheel of the legislature.

(ii) Even in a presidential form of government the legislature has its share in the executive field. Thus in the USA the Senate which is the upper house, shares the executive functions of the President like making appointments and making treaties.

(b) Legislative functions of the executive:

The executive also performs some legislative functions as noted below:

(i) In a parliamentary system of government the chi
ef executive like the Queen of England and the President of India summons and prorogues the legislature. The authority can dissolve the lower house and order for fresh elections.

(ii) It is a practice in almost all the countries of the world to refer the bill passed by the legislature to the chief executive for approval. Unless the chief executive okays the bill, it cannot be law. The chief executive can withhold his assent which is called the veto power of the executive over the legislature.

(iii) When the legislature is in recess, some urgent laws can be made by the chief executive by promulgating ordinances which will have the force of law. The life of an ordinance varies from state to state. It is a short-term measure. This is a direct legislative fiat of the executive.

(iv) In a parliamentary form of government the executive has a mass of legislative spade-work. It is the executive that initiates a bill in the legislature. So in a cabinet government a minister initiates bills in the legislature. A bill sponsored by a private member has little scope of success in the absence of direct patronage from the ministers.

Thus we find that the Prasar Bharati Bill to ensure autonomy to the All India Radio and the Doordarshan was piloted by the Minister for Information and broadcasting in the V. P. Singh Government.

(v) The executive makes what is called “delegated legislation”. The legislature cannot make the minutest details of all laws. It frames only the broad laws. The minor aspect of the legislation is done by the rule-making powers of the executive. These rules and regulations which have the same force as law is the exclusive legislative domain of the executive.

(vi) The executive also shares the legislative functions of the nature of financial legislations like the budget and the Finance Act. In England and India, no money bill can be introduced in the legislature without the prior approval of the Queen or the President.

(vii) The executive supplies the leadership to the legislature. It initiates, formulates and explains the legislative policy and asks the legislature to accept it. Even the President of the USA has such a myriad of legislative functions that he has come to be nicknamed the “chief legislator”.

In the parliamentary government the legislature chooses the executive as its trustee and supervises over the functioning of the trust. From whatever angle of vision we look at it, the legislature and the executive are two wheels of a chariot and must have a harmonious and meaningful relation.

Conclusion:

The orthodox separation of power between the legislature and the executive is not possible and a student of political science knows how these three wings transgress and poach into other’s field. The recent trend is the ascendancy of the executive over the legislature.

As a matter of fact, the legislation is dictated by the executive as per its own policy and programme, because the legislature consists of the majority members belonging to the political party, to which the executive belongs.

Mrs. Indira Gandhi wanted to abolish the privy purse and, in order to get the needed majority, she ordered for a mid-term poll. When she got the needed majority in the parliament the parliament made the constitutional amendment. Thus the desire of the executive was ritualised by the legislature that gave the post facto approval.

ii. Relation between the Legislature and the Judiciary:

Although the legislature and the judiciary must not muddle with other’s playground, we find some kind of affinity between these two organs of government.

(a) Judicial functions of the legislature:

The legislature performs some judicial functions. We shall describe these below:

(i) Some legislatures are by themselves courts of law. For example, the House of Lords, which are the upper house in England, is the highest court of appeal in that country. But in other countries, the legislature, instead of being a regular court of law, discharges some functions that partake the nature of a court of law.

For example, the Senate, which is the upper house of the USA, is the highest forum to impeach the public servants. Similarly, the parliament of India acts as a court of law while impeaching the President of India.

(ii) The trial or punishment for the purpose of removing the Judges of the Supreme Court and the High Courts of India takes place in the chamber of the two houses of parliament. It is the parliament, i.e., the legislature that can take a resolution for the removal of a judge.

(iii) Disputes with regard to the election cases are decided by the parliament of England. The parliament has the power to punish its members for breach of privilege. For the same charge the parliament can arrest a private citizen. No appeal lies in any higher courts against such decisions.

(b) Legislative functions of the judiciary:

The judiciary also plays a very fruitful legislative role.

(i) It is common knowledge that when a new case comes up before the judiciary that cannot be covered by the existing laws, the judges are to make new laws by giving what are called the rulings. These laws are called the judge-made laws or judicial laws. These are also commonly called the judicial precedents.

When a judge has to open ground in a barren field he is to go by his conscience based on justice, equity and good sense.

(ii) The books on law including the constitution of a country contain the written laws of that country. But these laws are of dubious interpretations. Who will then tell what the real meaning of these laws are? It is the judiciary that will play that vital role. The Supreme Court of the USA by mountains of decisions has changed the complexion of the constitutional laws and, as a matter of fact, handed down a new constitution.

The old and original constitution has been disfigured beyond recognition. It is for this reason that Harold J. Laski called the Supreme Court of the USA the third chamber of American legislation.

iii. Relationship between the Executive and the Judiciary:

It is admitted in all hands that the executive must not interfere with the judiciary for the sake of safeguarding the civil liberty of the individuals. According to Charles-Louis Montesquieu, if the executive is given judicial functions that executive will be oppressive. But simple arithmetic is no solution for a political conviction.

So we find the executive and the judiciary travelling beyond their limits. Nowhere and never have judges been able to go against the established system. Their independence has never reached higher than the ruling class. Thus we find that the Supreme Court of the USA upheld slavery which had to be abolished by an executive fiat in the hands of the President of the USA, Abraham Lincoln.

So Lord Bacon put it in his famous essay of judicature:

“Judges are lions, but lions under the throne”.

The political throne upon which the executive sits has always a primacy over the judiciary.

(a) Judicial functions of the executive:

The executive performs some judicial functions as a matter of expediency.

Some of them are jotted down here:

(i) It is the executive that selects and appoints the judges in most of the countries of the world. By such appointing powers the executive exercises a kind of control over the judiciary.

(ii) The chief executive of almost all countries is the highest authority to grant pardon, reprieve and respite. It is a major judicial power of the executive, because it can annul the punishment put upon a person by the ordinary courts of law.

(iii) In the continental countries like France the public servants are tried not in ordinary courts of law but in administrative co
urts which are manned by the executive.

(iv) In modern India there are some administrative tribunals or statutory tribunals, like Motor Vehicle Claims Tribunal, Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, etc., that are run by the executive just like regular courts of law.

(b) Executive functions of the judiciary:

The judiciary too, in certain cases and to a certain extent, discharges some functions which partake the nature of executive functions.

The following are some of the pointers in that direction:

(i) As a matter of fact, the judiciary has no executive function. What it has is a kind of control over the executive by declaring null and void a decision of the executive if it is unreasonable or outside the power of the executive.

In the USA every executive measure must go to the Supreme Court for clearance. It means that whether the executive measure is reasonable or constitutional must be scrutinised by the courts of law.

This system is called the judicial review. Although the system of judicial review does not obtain in India, any executive action can be challenged by any individual in the Supreme Court or the High Courts to test whether these measures are within the power of the executive.

(ii) The Supreme Court and High Courts in India are empowered to appoint their local officials and subordinate staff. This is an executive function of the judiciary. The judiciary also appoints receivers, guardians and trustees and appoints clericals and other functionaries.


Upload and Share Your Article: