Present law, absent justice

Law is often not a source of justice, but a form of violence that is so absolute in its impact that dissent is not ever a possibility.

Explicating what the law is has always been the monopoly of lawyers, who have seemingly been granted the 'exclusive' power to decipher the mysteries of the law and interpret them for the wider world. The hegemony of this group over the wide realm of law is perhaps best illustrated by the fact that, even in meetings of activists, the final word on legal strategy is generally left to the lawyer.

For their part, lawyers take this reverence for their station as their natural due; this deference has, in fact, resulted in keeping out many alternative interpretations of the law. In any library or bookshop, a mountain of volumes that specialise in law can be found, all of which will prove to be learned discussions on various incomprehensible acts. What is common to these erudite tomes is the way that they doggedly plod from provision to provision, detailing exactly how the courts have interpreted various laws. Any lay person who happens to peruse such books would happily decide to leave these stolid and boring versions of the law to the lawyers. Doing so, however, only reinforces the monopoly that the profession has on the interpretation of law.

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Himal Southasian
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