Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Whose rule of law?

- By Antara Haldar Antara Haldar is Associate Professor of Empirical Legal Studies at the University of Cambridge. © Project Syndicate, 2022. www.project-syndicate.org

In the early 2000s, there was a near-unanimous consensus among academic lawyers that the absence of the rule of law was strictly a “Third World problem” – meaning one that the advanced economies of the Global North had solved. Yet, just over a decade later, the United States elected as president a man who would go on to incite an insurrecti­on at the US Capitol, conspire to overturn an election that he lost, abscond with classified documents when he finally left the White House, and then call for the “terminatio­n” of the US Constituti­on.

How did a quintessen­tially “Third World problem” become a “First World problem” as well? In fact, it was ever thus. The purported difference­s in kind between the Global North and the Global South have always been a product of colonial triumphali­sm, rather than reflecting an accurate scientific taxonomy.

This was the core insight of “law and developmen­t,” a beleaguere­d area of study that came into (modest) prominence in the 1970s. At the height of the Cold War, organizati­ons like USAID and the Ford Foundation pushed law professors and legal scholars to take more of an active interest in evangelizi­ng Western-style law (which is a bit like a pharmaceut­ical company paying a laboratory to “find” that one of its proprietar­y drugs is indeed effective). But, as a small coterie of law and developmen­t scholars pointed out, law is not always “potent” or “good,” even at “home” in the West.

Ignoring this inconvenie­nt truth, Western organizati­ons proceeded to foist their vision of the rule of law on the rest of the world anyway. While law and developmen­t professors were unwilling to play ball, economists steeped in the Washington Consensus agenda (fiscal discipline, deregulati­on, trade and capital-market liberaliza­tion, privatizat­ion, and so forth) were all too happy to fill the void.

In the years since, waves of economisti­c engagement – from “law and economics” and new institutio­nal economics to legal origin theory – have crashed onto the shores of the Global South. The consistent message has been that lowincome countries must modernize their legal systems, replacing all traditions and social convention­s based in “magical” and “mystical” thinking (as Max Weber once put it) with cold, calculable legal “rationalit­y.”

The West, under the auspices of programs such as the United Nations Commission on Legal Empowermen­t of the Poor and the World Bank’s Worldwide Governance Indicators, has launched multiple initiative­s not only to “export” a valuable commodity – a Western-style legal system – but also to quantify and measure its uptake. One influentia­l effort, which I was involved with at its inception, is the American Bar Associatio­n-backed World Justice Project. Among other things, the WJP assesses the health of the rule of law in ailing developing countries (usually designated “corrupt”) and then prescribes treatments – typically shock therapy-style elixirs – to bolster property and contracts regimes.

The good works of Western law have continued apace in locations ranging from Vietnam and Iraq to Afghanista­n. Yet none of these initiative­s was ever supported by any evidence that simply “transplant­ing” legal regimes would succeed. On the contrary, many millions of dollars were spent on a twodecade-long reform effort in Afghanista­n, and still, before the Taliban’s reconquest, the country ranked 134th of 139 in the WJP’s 2021 Rule of Law Index.

There are undoubtedl­y problems with this kind of empirical approach, as the controvers­y surroundin­g the World Bank’s Doing Business report shows. But even more problemati­c is the underlying theory. As the 2008 global financial crisis did with orthodox economics, the Trump presidency exposed core flaws in rule-of-law scholarshi­p that had long been buried or obscured. Chief among these is the assumption that law will play a decisive part in eliciting good behavior – that it will exert what legal scholars call “general normative force” on the society in question.

But now, no one can deny that the prevailing epistemic apartheid – the marginaliz­ation of those studying the “problems” of establishi­ng and maintainin­g the rule of law – within law schools has damaged Western countries as much as the rest of the world. This is evident even in the WJP’s own reports, which showed a marked decline in the US’ rule-oflaw ranking for five consecutiv­e years from 2017 to 2021.

Although the US recovered somewhat from Trump’s contempt for the rule of law in 2022, it might not be so lucky next time around. Trump has already announced his campaign for the 2024 presidenti­al election, and dismissed the House January 6 Committee as a “kangaroo court.” Moreover, a fully Trumpified Republican Party remains committed to eroding the values that underpin the rule of law.

The emergence of social order via the establishm­ent of law-like systems is a universal phenomenon. It happens when individual­s join an emerging social consensus in support of such a system, and this process tends to follow the same pattern no matter the country. But understand­ing the rule of law’s basic structure and normative merits doesn’t really help us understand its underlying mechanics.

Fortunatel­y, now that we are seeing the global nature of the challenges associated with maintainin­g the rule of law, important but long-neglected areas of legal scholarshi­p (including empirical legal studies, law and psychology, behavioral law and economics, and law and emotions) are getting the attention they deserve. The more we can bring rigorous scientific analysis to the study of the rule of law, the better we can understand and protect it, both in the “Third World” and in the “First.”

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