[The University of Sydney]







Dennis Leslie Mahoney Prize Lecture

7 September 2017





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Re-Imagining the Rule of Law
Speaker: Professor Martin Krygier, 
UNSW<http://www.law.unsw.edu.au/profile/martin-krygier>
In 2016 Professor Krygier was awarded the Dennis Leslie Mahoney Prize in Legal 
Theory.


“The rule of law is a concept at once too important to ignore, and too confused 
and confusing to guide. It needs and deserves re-imagining. Moreover, if we are 
to understand its character conditions and consequences, the legal imagination, 
if such a solecism be allowed, is as likely to hinder as to help.

Many, particularly lawyers, will resist such a suggestion. Where better to seek 
wisdom about the rule of law than from lawyers? Surely, like plumbers with 
toilets, and dentists with drills, they know whereof they speak. And why 
're-imagine' a concept long central to great legal traditions, that has today 
come to have unprecedented popularity and more important, speaks to issues of 
profound importance? Why not stick with established insights and 
understandings, enriched as they have been with age-old reflection by those 
whose job - whose vocation indeed - has been to sustain the rule of law. Maybe 
some sediment might need to be brushed off, perhaps something added here and 
there, but why re-imagined? If, on the other hand, you are impatient with the 
idea, why not just abandon it and turn to something else.

Notwithstanding the force of those objections, I believe the rule of law needs 
to be substantially re-imagined, rather than either recycled, on the one hand, 
or discarded, on the other. Not recycled, since conventional understandings 
have too often led to misguided explications, identifications, expectations, 
and efforts, quite apart from the waste of huge amounts of money. Not 
discarded, since like reflection on many of the most important (and also 
contested) concepts in the lexicon of political and legal morality, such as 
justice and democracy, equality and liberty, the rule of law engages us in 
fundamental issues of politics, morality, philosophy, and law (not to mention 
economics, which I don't mention only because I don't understand it). Instead, 
while we should start from traditional understandings and insights, we cannot 
end there. We must also be prepared to amend them, indeed re-imagine them quite 
radically, where they mislead or do not lead far enough. So much so, that to 
further the ends of the rule of law, we might need to leave conventional 
imaginings of it far behind.”

About the Speaker
Martin Krygier<http://www.law.unsw.edu.au/profile/martin-krygier> is Gordon 
Samuels Professor of Law and Social Theory, UNSW, Adjunct Professor at RegNet, 
ANU, and recurrent visiting professor at the Graduate School of Social 
Research, Warsaw, and the International Institute of Sociology of Law, Onati. 
He is a fellow of the Australian Academy of Social Sciences. His writings are 
generally concerned to explore the moral characters and consequences of large 
institutions, among them law, state and bureaucracy.

His most recent book is Philip Selznick. Ideals in the World. In 2005, he 
published Civil Passions, a selection of his essays on matters of public 
debate. Between Fear and Hope. Hybrid Thoughts on Public Values is based on his 
1997 Boyer lectures. In recent years, he has written extensively on the rule of 
law - its nature, conditions, and challenges - and on prospects for the rule of 
law in post-dictatorship, post-conflict, and generally politically scarred 
societies. Apart from many articles on these themes, he has edited and 
contributed to Spreading Democracy and the Rule of Law?; Rethinking the Rule of 
Law after Communism; Community and Legality: the Intellectual Legacy of Philip 
Selznick; The Rule of Law after Communism; Marxism and Communism. Posthumous 
Reflections on Politics, Society, and Law; Bureaucracy: The Career of a Concept 
(Edward Arnold, 1980). Apart from academic writings he contributes to journals 
of ideas and public debate.

Thursday 7 September
6 – 7.30pm (registration from 5.30pm)

Venue
Sydney Law School, New Law School Building (F10), Eastern Avenue, 
Camperdown<http://sydney.edu.au/law/about/campus.shtml>

Registration
Complimentary, however registration is essential.

Register here<http://sydney.edu.au/news/law/457.html?eventid=11656>



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