Legal idealism: definition of the concept
In modern legal literature, the legalnihilism is an antithesis of legal idealism. At the same time, it should be noted that it also has a number of negative features and consequences, which are a consequence of legal ignorance, undeveloped and deformed sense of justice, to a certain extent even a shortage of political and legal culture. Legal idealism is an extremely hypertrophied attitude towards legal means, revaluation
Causes
- Legal starvation, cultivated for decades and centuries.
- The extreme degree of legal ignorance.
- Undeveloped and deformed sense of justice in society.
- Legal ignorance of citizens.
- Deficiency of political and legal culture.
Often, all these problems, a direct consequencewhich are legal idealism, stem from the omnipotence of state power over a long period of people's history. Under Russian conditions, we have a similar situation when the prolonged subordination of all civil and natural rights by the government (in the form of the ban on wearing a beard, the forced wearing of European clothes, the long preservation of feudal relations, decades of total fear of state power, etc.) has led to inadequate perceptions the legal system in our day.
Forms of legal idealism
- Absolutely unrealistic attitude to the right of legal scholars. Perception of this right as an abstraction, completely detached from life.
- The blind and peremptory faith of citizens of the state in "good laws", which in themselves are able to quickly change everything for the better.
- The literal perception of legal law asThe only means that regulates social relations. Ignoring the objective reality, in which not only law regulates social relations.
- Extremely idealistic attitude towards legalnorms on the part of legislators. For example, legal idealism leads to negative consequences, when members of the parliament during the development and adoption of legal acts are poorly oriented in the vital reality of the people and their interests, believe that the adoption of the law alone can solve the problems that have arisen, and therefore can not provide for mechanisms for implementing the norms of this legal act.
- Excessive fascination with the formal side of the rule of law (for example, during the consideration of court cases). </ ul </ p>