The Rule of Law as a Postcolonial Relic: The Narrative of the Polish Right

Autor/innen

  • Marta Bucholc University of Warsaw

Schlagwörter:

Polen, Rechtsstaat, Populismus, Postkolonialismus, Rechtskritik

Abstract

The article discusses the uses of the postcolonial framing by Prawo i Sprawiedliwość based on an analysis of its 2019 electoral agenda. The main argument is that the postcolonial framing is crucial for the understanding of the national-conservative variant of the critique of the rule of law as exercised by PiS. Five components of the postcolonial framing used in the Agenda are analysed: creolisation of elites (exemplified by the image of Polish judiciary as a postcolonial elite agents of self-colonization); mimicry (the concern for family and marriage, and the approach to LGBTIQ rights); hybridity (illustrated by the critique of the introduction of the rule of law in Poland); subalternity (exemplified by the loss of state sovereignty and international standing as a result of self-colonization of Poland in the EU); and voicelesness (connected with the concern with multilinguistic communication, particularly in international organisations). An analysis of how these five themes occur in the Agenda 2019 leads towards a summary of the PiS’ revisionist view of the postcommunist transformation. In the conclusion, the likely further development of Polish legal order towards internal colonization is indicated.

Veröffentlicht

26.05.2023

Zitationsvorschlag

The Rule of Law as a Postcolonial Relic: The Narrative of the Polish Right. (2023). Zeitschrift für Rechtssoziologie, 42(1). https://submissions.zfrsoz.info/index.php/zfrsoz/article/view/45