Collaborative Legal Pluralism

Legal pluralism calls into question the monopoly of the modern state when it comes to the production and the enforcement of norms. It rests on the assumption that juridical normativity and state organization can be dissociated. From an early modern historian’s perspective, such an assumption makes p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wim Decock
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory 2017-01-01
Series:Rechtsgeschichte - Legal History
Subjects:
Online Access:http://data.rg.mpg.de/rechtsgeschichte/rg25_103decock.pdf
id doaj-d9cdc795c83f4ee689a181472f8c2a63
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d9cdc795c83f4ee689a181472f8c2a632021-03-02T09:57:07ZdeuMax Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal TheoryRechtsgeschichte - Legal History1619-49932195-96172017-01-01Rg 2510311410.12946/rg25/103-1141095Collaborative Legal PluralismWim Decock0KU Leuven; Université de LiègeLegal pluralism calls into question the monopoly of the modern state when it comes to the production and the enforcement of norms. It rests on the assumption that juridical normativity and state organization can be dissociated. From an early modern historian’s perspective, such an assumption makes perfect sense, the plural nature of the legal order being the natural state of affairs in imperial spaces across the globe in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. This article will provide a case study of the collaborative nature of the interaction between spiritual and temporal legal orders in Spain and its overseas territories as conceived by Tomás de Mercado (ca. 1520–1575), a major theologian from the School of Salamanca. His treatise on trade and contracts (1571) contained an extended discussion of the government’s attempt to regulate the grain market by imposing a maximum price. It will be argued that Mercado’s view on the bindingness of economic regulations in conscience allowed for the internalization of the regulatory power of the nascent state. He called upon confessors to be strict enforcers of state law, considering them as fathers of the republic as much as fathers of faith. This is illustrative of the »collaborative form of legal pluralism« typical of the osmotic relationship between Church and State in the early modern Spanish empire. It contributed to the moral justification of state jurisdictions, while at the same time, guaranteeing a privileged role for theologians and religious leaders in running the affairs of the state.http://data.rg.mpg.de/rechtsgeschichte/rg25_103decock.pdflegal pluralismSchool of Salamancaeconomic governancemarket interventionismconscience
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wim Decock
spellingShingle Wim Decock
Collaborative Legal Pluralism
Rechtsgeschichte - Legal History
legal pluralism
School of Salamanca
economic governance
market interventionism
conscience
author_facet Wim Decock
author_sort Wim Decock
title Collaborative Legal Pluralism
title_short Collaborative Legal Pluralism
title_full Collaborative Legal Pluralism
title_fullStr Collaborative Legal Pluralism
title_full_unstemmed Collaborative Legal Pluralism
title_sort collaborative legal pluralism
publisher Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory
series Rechtsgeschichte - Legal History
issn 1619-4993
2195-9617
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Legal pluralism calls into question the monopoly of the modern state when it comes to the production and the enforcement of norms. It rests on the assumption that juridical normativity and state organization can be dissociated. From an early modern historian’s perspective, such an assumption makes perfect sense, the plural nature of the legal order being the natural state of affairs in imperial spaces across the globe in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. This article will provide a case study of the collaborative nature of the interaction between spiritual and temporal legal orders in Spain and its overseas territories as conceived by Tomás de Mercado (ca. 1520–1575), a major theologian from the School of Salamanca. His treatise on trade and contracts (1571) contained an extended discussion of the government’s attempt to regulate the grain market by imposing a maximum price. It will be argued that Mercado’s view on the bindingness of economic regulations in conscience allowed for the internalization of the regulatory power of the nascent state. He called upon confessors to be strict enforcers of state law, considering them as fathers of the republic as much as fathers of faith. This is illustrative of the »collaborative form of legal pluralism« typical of the osmotic relationship between Church and State in the early modern Spanish empire. It contributed to the moral justification of state jurisdictions, while at the same time, guaranteeing a privileged role for theologians and religious leaders in running the affairs of the state.
topic legal pluralism
School of Salamanca
economic governance
market interventionism
conscience
url http://data.rg.mpg.de/rechtsgeschichte/rg25_103decock.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT wimdecock collaborativelegalpluralism
_version_ 1724238151748157440