Poverty and Justice: From The Poverty Of Law To The Rigth Of Poverty

The law, understood as the set of rules that organizes life in a given society (objectivemeaning) and recognizes the prerogatives of the members of the said society or subjects of law (subjective meaning), is incapable of effectively fighting against poverty. Indeed, the law seems to be powerless ag...

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Main Author: Ghislain-David KASONGO LUKOJI
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Law Universitas Lampung 2022-06-01
Series:Ius Poenale
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jurnal.fh.unila.ac.id/index.php/ip/article/view/2533
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author Ghislain-David KASONGO LUKOJI
author_facet Ghislain-David KASONGO LUKOJI
author_sort Ghislain-David KASONGO LUKOJI
collection DOAJ
description The law, understood as the set of rules that organizes life in a given society (objectivemeaning) and recognizes the prerogatives of the members of the said society or subjects of law (subjective meaning), is incapable of effectively fighting against poverty. Indeed, the law seems to be powerless against this social fact, or even scourge, to the point that it displays sometimes contradictory attitudes to it, crystallising in a shifting legal categorisation. Fortunately, it is not resigned: it perpetually reinvents ‘stratagems’tending to establish an artificial equality between the members of the community and protect the weakest or most vulnerable among them. Justice is one of the social sectors where the interaction between ‘law and ‘poverty’ is particularly evident. While it is true that poverty can be a barrier to access to justice, the restriction of the right to access to justice reinforces or leads to poverty. This contribution is based on a historio-epistemo-comparative approach: it first used the exegetical method to analyze the scope and basis of the legal framework of poverty and its implication on access to justice, before resorting to the comparative and historical method in order to identify the origin of the solutions proposed by Congolese law on the issue in relation to the Belgian and French systems with which it has close sociological links. The study thus demonstrates the difficulty that developing countries, particularly the Democratic Republic of Congo, have in meeting this challenge, both in the field of adult justice and in that of juvenile justice, where the problem is more acute, especially from a different position.
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spelling doaj.art-bdf1114e37324a8e8fa7cda711ae072e2022-12-22T03:54:14ZengFaculty of Law Universitas LampungIus Poenale2723-26382745-93142022-06-0131497010.25041/ip.v3i1.25331263Poverty and Justice: From The Poverty Of Law To The Rigth Of PovertyGhislain-David KASONGO LUKOJI0Université Nouveaux HorizonsThe law, understood as the set of rules that organizes life in a given society (objectivemeaning) and recognizes the prerogatives of the members of the said society or subjects of law (subjective meaning), is incapable of effectively fighting against poverty. Indeed, the law seems to be powerless against this social fact, or even scourge, to the point that it displays sometimes contradictory attitudes to it, crystallising in a shifting legal categorisation. Fortunately, it is not resigned: it perpetually reinvents ‘stratagems’tending to establish an artificial equality between the members of the community and protect the weakest or most vulnerable among them. Justice is one of the social sectors where the interaction between ‘law and ‘poverty’ is particularly evident. While it is true that poverty can be a barrier to access to justice, the restriction of the right to access to justice reinforces or leads to poverty. This contribution is based on a historio-epistemo-comparative approach: it first used the exegetical method to analyze the scope and basis of the legal framework of poverty and its implication on access to justice, before resorting to the comparative and historical method in order to identify the origin of the solutions proposed by Congolese law on the issue in relation to the Belgian and French systems with which it has close sociological links. The study thus demonstrates the difficulty that developing countries, particularly the Democratic Republic of Congo, have in meeting this challenge, both in the field of adult justice and in that of juvenile justice, where the problem is more acute, especially from a different position.https://jurnal.fh.unila.ac.id/index.php/ip/article/view/2533droit (de l’homme)indigencejusticepauvretévulnérabilité
spellingShingle Ghislain-David KASONGO LUKOJI
Poverty and Justice: From The Poverty Of Law To The Rigth Of Poverty
Ius Poenale
droit (de l’homme)
indigence
justice
pauvreté
vulnérabilité
title Poverty and Justice: From The Poverty Of Law To The Rigth Of Poverty
title_full Poverty and Justice: From The Poverty Of Law To The Rigth Of Poverty
title_fullStr Poverty and Justice: From The Poverty Of Law To The Rigth Of Poverty
title_full_unstemmed Poverty and Justice: From The Poverty Of Law To The Rigth Of Poverty
title_short Poverty and Justice: From The Poverty Of Law To The Rigth Of Poverty
title_sort poverty and justice from the poverty of law to the rigth of poverty
topic droit (de l’homme)
indigence
justice
pauvreté
vulnérabilité
url https://jurnal.fh.unila.ac.id/index.php/ip/article/view/2533
work_keys_str_mv AT ghislaindavidkasongolukoji povertyandjusticefromthepovertyoflawtotherigthofpoverty