Realist school of jurisprudence

REALIST SCHOOL OF JURISPRUDENCE

TANMOY MUKHERJI INSTITUTE OF JURIDICAL SCIENCE

Dr. Tanmoy Mukherji

Advocate

 

REALIST SCHOOL OF JURISPRUDENCE-

Tanmoy Mukherji

Advocate


The Realist School of Jurisprudence is a modern school of thought which studies law as it actually operates in society, rather than as it is written in statutes or defined in abstract theories.

It rejects the idea that law is a closed logical system and emphasizes that law is a dynamic social process.

Realists believe that judicial decisions are influenced by human, social, economic, and psychological factors.

Historical Background-

Originated in the United States during the early 20th century

Also developed in Scandinavian countries

Came as a reaction against:

Realists argued that these schools ignored how courts actually function.

Central Thesis of the Realist School

Law is what the courts do in fact.

According to realists-

Hence, law can be understood only by studying court decisions and judicial practices.

Characteristics

Law in Action vs Law in Books

Statutes and precedents represent law in books

Court decisions represent law in action

Realists focus on practical outcomes, not theoretical correctness.

Example: Two courts may interpret the same statute differently based on facts and social context.

Judge as a Law-Maker

Judges do not mechanically apply law

They interpret, modify, and create law

Especially important in:

Hard cases

Constitutional interpretation

Uncertainty and Indeterminacy of Law-

Hence, certainty in law is an illusion

Role of Extra-Legal Factors-

This is called the non-logical element of law.

Fact-Centered Approach-

Realists give priority to facts over rules

Predictive Theory of Law

Law is the prediction of what courts will do.

Leading Jurists and Their Views

American Realism

Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.

Most influential realist thinker

Ideas:

Law evolves through experience, not logic.

 

Famous Quote:

The life of the law has not been logic; it has been experience.”

Karl Llewellyn

Systematic realist

Contributions:

Distinguished between:

Paper rules (formal rules)

Real rules (rules actually applied)

Focused on:

Behavior of judges

Institutional practices of courts

Supported judicial creativity within limits

Jerome Frank

Radical realist

Ideas:

Fact skepticism

Outcomes depend heavily on:

Judge’s mood

Emotional response

Personal bias

Believed legal certainty is impossible

Famous View:

Justice is what the judge had for breakfast.”

Scandinavian Realism

 Alf Ross

Law is a social fact

A legal rule is valid only if courts actually apply it

Rejected metaphysical concepts of law

Karl Olivecrona

Law is neither command nor morality

Legal rules are psychological and social phenomena

Emphasized collective acceptance

Realist School and Indian Legal System

Although India does not formally follow realism, its influence is visible:

Examples:

Judicial activism

Public Interest Litigation (PIL)

Expansive interpretation of Fundamental Rights.

Case Example-

Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India (1978)

Article 21 interpreted dynamically

Shows realist approach

Contribution and Significance

Brought reality and pragmatism into law

Highlighted the creative role of judges

Improved legal education and judicial training

Encouraged empirical study of law

Influenced modern constitutional interpretation

Criticism of the Realist School

Destroys certainty and predictability

Gives excessive power to judges

Undermines rule of law

Neglects importance of statutes

Over-emphasis on psychology

-The Realist School revolutionized legal thought by shifting attention from abstract rules to real judicial behavior.

-Though extreme realism may threaten legal certainty, a balanced realist approach strengthens justice by aligning law with social realities.

 

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