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The article connects two strands of the recent sociolegal debate: (1) the empirical discovery of new forms of spontaneous law in die Course of globalization, and (2) the emergence of deconstructive theories of law that undermine the law's hierarchy. The article puts forward the thesis that law's hierarchy has successfully resisted all old and new attempts at its deconstruction; it breaks, however, under the pressures of globalization that produced a global law without the state, as self-created law of global society that has no institutionalized support whatsoever in international poliucs and public international law. Consequently, the article criticizes deconstructive theories for their lack of autological analysis. These theories do not take into account the historical condicions of deconstruction. Accordingly, deconstructive analysis of law would have to look for new legal distinctions that are plausible under the new condicions of a doubly fragmented global society. The article sketches the contours of an emerging polycontextural law.
Plenarvortrag Weltkongress der Rechtsphilosophie und Sozialphilosophie, 24.-29. Mai, Granada 2005. S.a. die deutsche Fassung: "Die anonyme Matrix: Menschenrechtsverletzungen durch "private" transnationale Akteure". Spanische Fassung: Sociedad global, justicia fragmentada: sobre la violatión de los derechos humanos por actores transnacionales 'privados'. In: Manuel Escamilla and Modesto Saavedra (eds.), Law and Justice in a global society, International Association for philosophy of law and social philosophy, Granada 2005, S. 547-562 und in "Anales de öa Catedra Francisco Suarez 2005". S.a. Teubner, Gunther: Globalized Justice - Fragmented Justice. Human Rights Violations by "Private" Transnational Actors
Reflexives Recht. Entwicklungsmodelle des Rechts in vergleichender Perspektive (EUI Working Paper 1982/13). Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie 68, 1982, 13-59, und in: Werner Maihofer (Hg.), Noi si Mura, Schriftenreihe des Europäischen Hochschulinstituts, Florenz 1986, 290-340. Englische Fassung: Substantive and Reflexive Elements in Modern Law. (EUI Working Paper 1982/14). Law and Society Review 17, 1983, 239-285 und in: Kahei Rokumoto (Hg.) Sociological Theories of Law. Dartmouth, Aldershot 1994, 415-462. Neuabdruck in: Carroll Seron, The Law and Society Canon, Ashgate, Aldershot 2005 (im Erscheinen). Französische Fassung: Eléments 'substantifs' et 'réflexifs' dans le droit moderne. L'Interdit. Revue de Psychanalyse Institutionelle, 1984, 129-132, und Droit et réflexivité: une perspective comparative sur des modèles d'évolution juridique in: Gunther Teubner, Droit et réflexivité. Librairie générale de droit et de jurisprudence, Paris 1994, 3-50. Dänische Fassung: Refleksiv Ret: Udviklingsmodeller i sammenlignende perspektiv. In: Asmund Born, Nils Bredsdorff, Leif Hansen and Finn Hansson (Hg.) Refleksiv Ret. Publication Series of the Institut for Organisation og Arbeidssociologi. Nytfrasamfundsvidenskaberne, Kopenhagen 1988, 21-79.
Constitutionalization beyond the nation state can be observed as an evolutionary process that leads in two quite different directions: (1) constitutions evolve in transnational political processes outside the nation state; (2) simulta-neously, constitutions evolve outside international politics in global society’s ‘private’ sectors. What, however, is the specifically societal element in societal constitutionalism? This is currently the object of a controversy regarding the subjects of non-state constitutions, their origin, their legitimization, their scope, and their internal structures. This article interprets the controversy as a theme with a number of variations. What is the distinctive ‘compositional principle’ in each particular variation? Which problems become evident in its ‘development’? What are its most valuable ‘motifs’? The article starts with David Sciulli’s theme of societal constitutionalism. Then it presents six variations on Sciulli. In a first group, constitutionalization is perceived as the expansion of a single rationality into all spheres of society. In a second group, the motif of the unity of the consti-tution can still be heard, despite the essential pluralism of societal constitution-alism. In the final movement, three further variations will then reprise and devel-op further the most important motifs, in a resumption of the original theme.