Law and Ethics in Judicial Systems

1244 Words3 Pages

Q The Separation of Law and Ethics
The separation between law and ethics has become a central pillar of most legal systems. This essay will review three articles that discuss insights relevant to this topic and acknowledge strengths and weaknesses that contribute to my understanding of this issue. First, Sheppard discusses the role of ethics, law and justice in society and how the state’s role becomes important when enshrining these laws. Second, Wendel analyses this issue through the lenses of the torture memos which were used to justify torture by the American government and how laws and morals were involved. Lastly, Campbell demonstrates the importance of why unanimous decisions are needed in judicial systems and how they could possibly collapse without them and how concepts such as legal validity, desirability, the ‘separability thesis’ and rules of recognition would stop this from happening. These articles show comprehensively that for harmonisation of law and ethics to become normal, a clear acceptance of certain standards would have to be articulated before such was to occur, because if such did not happen the disconnect would lead to differences becoming present and disruptive.
All three articles examined have created a distinct analysis by which we can examine the separation of law and ethics in our society. First, the article by Sheppard examines issues pertaining to the linkages between ethics, law and justice and how society goes about enshrining these laws in a manner that ensures continuity in the face of constant change. This article demonstrates a simple but effective illustration of how ethics, law and justice is developed. First, the individual creates the conduct by which they go about living their lif...

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...perly and without it could collapse and how concepts like legal validity, desirability, the ‘separability thesis’ and rule of recognition help enable this to happen, but again through diversity this makes it difficult for any meaningful change to come into effect. Overall, the harmonisation of law and ethics is just too difficult a task to complete, because it requires a commitment by all to enshrine a legal framework applicable to all and universal in nature, irrespective of the differences that divide us.

References
Campbell, Tom. 2002. Legal Validity and Judicial Ethics. Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics (CAPPE): Melbourne.
Sheppard, Steve. Law, Ethics and Justice. Encyclopaedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS): Paris.
Wendel, W. 2005. Legal Ethics and the Separation of Laws and Morals. Cornell Law Faculty Publications: New York.

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