Kritarchy

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Kritarchy is a political system based on equal justice for all and the concept of natural rights.[citation needed] It differs from other political systems by its application of the rules of justice. Under kritarchy even courts of law, police forces and other organizations that look after the day-to-day business of maintaining law, are denied any power, privilege or immunity that is not in conformity with natural law. Every person is entitled to offer judicial or police-services to willing others; no person can be forced to become a client of any court of law or police force against his or her will. In short, under kritarchy judicial and police-services are offered on a free market, which is considered to be the natural law of the human world insofar as exchanges of goods and services are concerned.[citation needed] Kritarchy is essentially the natural rights form of anarcho-capitalism seen from a legal perspective.

The term ‘kritarchy’, compounded from the Greek words ‘kritès’ (judge) or ‘krito’ (to judge) and ‘archè’ (principle, cause), appears to be coined in 1844 by the English author Robert Southey.[citation needed] In its construction it resembles more familiar political terms such as monarchy, oligarchy and hierarchy. ‘Kritarchy’ is mentioned in, among others, Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary, The Oxford English Dictionary, and the American Collegiate Dictionary. According to its etymological roots, a kritarchy is a political system in which justice (more exactly the judgment that seeks to determine justice) is the ruling principle or first cause. Similarly a monarchy is a system in which one person is supposed to be the ruling principle or first cause of every legal action, every other person being no more than an obedient subject of the monarch, and under an oligarchy a few persons (the oligarchs), acting in concert but without a fixed hierarchy among them, are thought to be the source of all legal actions.

Opposite form of political system to Kritarchy is Krytocracy.


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[edit] References

  • Theoben Jerdan C. Orosa. "Constitutional Kritarchy Under the Grave Abuse Clause." Ateneo Law Journal 49.2 (Sep. 2004).
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