Sociology of Law
Sociology of Law
Functions of law
Law, in the modern sense, is considered not as an end in itself, but is a means to an end.
ACCORDING TO HOLLAND:
- The function of law is to ensure the well-being of the society. Thus it is something more than an
institution for the protection of individuals’ rights
Social Control
Dispute Settlement
Social Change
Functions of law
1) Social Control
2) Conflict resolution
3) Social facilitation
4) Integration
5) Social engineering
6) Social welfare
SOCIOLOGY OF LAW
SOCIOLOGY OF LAW
The Sociology of Law has its earliest foundations in the scholarship of Max Weber and Karl Renner,
amongst many other distinguished contributors, including Émile Durkheim and Vilhelm Aubert in the
20th century.
The field aims to transcend traditional legal boundaries by bringing into consideration the role of society
and its system of values and norms.
In this area, it is necessary to consider the legal structure, legal process and that:
A sociological interpretation and application of the law, however, does not bar the study of rules but
only “differentiates between the proclaimed objectives of legal norms, on the one hand, and the actual
workings and consequences of law, on the other”
The Sociology of Law is a focused and critical field in understanding legal mechanisms and legal practice,
as well as establishing the foundation of jurisprudence. However, a definition and general framework
need constructing so that the right questions can be formulated. The field transcends specific matters
and enriches learning both in the theoretical and practical sense by offering a more nuanced and
enriched analysis.
EUGEN EHRLICH
He believed that positive law which looks at “law” as the sum of statutes and court pronouncements
could not adequately capture the legal reality of a culture or society.
Legal norms
- Strictly legalistic.
- Legislated (positive) law mostly serves to contain or punish errant or deviant behaviors.
Social norms
- Permeate deeper in to the fabric and consciousness of society, hence must be regarded as a
component of “Law”.
ÉMILE DURKHEIM
Repressive law
- Laws of a small, close-knit, highly religious and traditional societies where a small
infraction of the rules is met with severe repercussions.
Restitutive laws
- Allows violators to make amends for damage, and reintegration to the mainstream.
Many of the rules, contracts and agreements are not written down or explicitly expressed.
- Lawyers and law practitioners are interested in determining the validity of the law.
“sociological” study of law deals on the “external” or empirical effects of the application of law to
society.
- Social scientist studying law is interested in what happens when people act in a society with
law in mind.
TALCOTT PARSONS
Law has an “integrative” function, and the lawyer’s role is crucial in that he mediates between the
technical requirements of the legal system and the needs of individual members of society for justice
and equal treatment.
Instrumentalist vision of law, which looks at law as a tool for power serving the rich and powerful rather
than used for the delivery of justice to the citizens.
THEORIES WHY LAW CAME INTO BEING
CONSENSUS THEORY
There is an agreement among members of a society in transforming their norms and values into laws,
giving the former more strength and general enforcement.
Sees society as an expression of its own values and norms developed and institutionalized in time by its
members.
CONFLICT THEORY
Emphasizes interests (over norms and values) and how these interests interact to form “conflicts” which
are but normal facts of societal life.
Conflict theorist believe that coercion rather than consensus cause social order.
Laws “serves the powerful over the weak” and that law is “used by the state… to promote and protect
itself.