From refuge to trap: formalist misadventures of Poland’s postsocialist legal profession
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Authors
Kisilowski, MaciejPublisher
Taylor & FrancisType
Journal articleTitle / Series / Name
International Journal of the Legal ProfessionPublication Volume
26Publication Issue
2-3Date
2019
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Since 2015 the populist government of the Law and Justice Party in Poland has spearheaded a highly effective campaign against the country’s lawyers, encountering relatively muted social opposition. Using Bourdieuan lenses, the article traces the roots of that remarkable institutional weakness of the Polish legal profession to the highly formalist approach to law and legal thinking that Poland’s lawyers espoused. Prior to the fall of communism, and in democratic Poland, the role of lawyers in society was to act as guardians of “neatness” of the legal system – or that system’s internal clarity, cohesion, and completeness. Such a sterile approach to legal practice was initially attractive, among other reasons, because it protected the legal profession from difficult legitimacy challenges stemming from that profession’s pre-1989 coexistence with the communist regime. With time, however, the refuge that formalism offered became a trap that undermined lawyers’ political and economic power.identifiers
10.1080/09695958.2019.1646654ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1080/09695958.2019.1646654
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