Something Wicked That Way Went:
Law and the Habit of Communism
Richard Janda
Post-communist societies have experienced the
transition to a market economy with varying results.
The author argues that differences in experience and
outcomes can be partly explained by the role of
habit, culture, and tradition in the process of legal
transition to a market economy. For example, the
market economy relies upon institutions, such as
“favourable moral traditions”, which are an aggre-
gate of individual rational choices. Trust is one such
tradition that is particularly significant. There must
not only be trust in the law but trust in the adminis-
trators of the law.
The author identifies two reasons for the more
difficult transition to the market economy as experi-
enced by Russia and other countries: first, the pres-
ence of individual opportunistic behaviour, distrust,
and mafia behaviour, which are largely engendered
by the prevailing habit of Stalinism/communism;
and secondly, the destruction of civil society under
communist ideology. In contrast, the author points to
a parallel culture nurtured by dissidents and an-
chored in a pre-communist tradition as a factor ex-
relative success of other post-
plaining
communist societies’ transition. Because this parallel
culture fostered trust it was an important factor in the
successful transition to a market economy and the
emergence of coincident legal institutions.
the
Les soci~t6s post-communistes ont v~cu la
transition vers une 6conomie de march6 avec des r6-
sultats varids. Uauteur soutient que les diff&ences
d’exp6rience et de rsultat peuvent 8tre partiellement
expliques par le r6le des habitudes, de la culture, et
de la tradition dans le processus de transition 16gale
vers une 6conomie de march& Par exemple,
l’d&onomie de march6 se fonde sur des institutions
telles que les <
sont un agr6gat de choix individuels rationnels. La
confiance est un exemple particulirement significa-
tif de ces traditions. Non seulement doit-on faire
leurs administrateurs.
confiance aux lois mais aussi
L’auteur identifie deux facteurs afin d’expliquer
la transition particuli~rement difficile de la Russie et
d’autres pays vers une 6conomie de march6 : pre-
mi~rement, la prsence du comportement opportu-
niste individuel, de la m~fiance et du comportement
mafieux, qui est largement engendr6e par l’habitude
; et,
prdominante du stalinisme-communisme
deuxi~mement, la destruction de Ta soci~t6 civile
l’id~ologie communiste. En comparaison,
sons
l’auteur identifie la culture parall~le, nourrie par les
tradition prd-
dissidents et ancre dans une
communiste, comme un facteur expliquant le succbs
de la transition effectu~e par d’autres soci6ts post-
communistes. Parce que cette culture parallle a fa-
voris6 et prvildgi6 la conflance, elle a t un facteur
important dans la transition russie vers une dcono-
mie de march6 et l’6mergence d’institutions lgales.
. Director, Centre for the Study of Regulated Industries, McGill University. Associate Professor,
McGill University, Faculty of Law and Institute of Comparative Law. I am grateful to Nathalie Azais,
Ian Bird, Deborah Carlson, Nicholas Kasirer and Rod Macdonald for their helpful comments and
suggestions. This Note was made possible in part by a grant from the Fonds pour la Formation de
Chercheurs et l’Aide
la Recherche (F.C.A.R.).
McGill Law Journal 1995
Revue de droit de McGill
To be cited as: (1995) 41 McGill L.J. 253
Mode de rdf~rence : (1995) 41 R.D. McGill 253
McGILL LAW JOURNAL/REvuE DE DROITDE MCGILL
[Vol. 41
Synopsis
Introduction
I.
H.
I.
Variations on the Theme of Market Transition
Institutions and the Black Box of Culture
The Paradox of Spontaneous Markets
IV. Markets, Culture and Trust
V.
Mafias, Communism and Distrust
VI.
The Apotheosis and Destruction of Civil Society
VII. Reconstituting Civil Society: Parallel Cultures Under Communism
VIII. Law and the Parallel Culture
Conclusion
19951
R. JANDA – LAWAND THE HABIT OF COMMUNISM
Introduction
In the Manifesto of the Communist Party of 1848, Karl Marx and Friedrich
Engels deride and attack bourgeois property and bourgeois law. They address their
enemy directly, in the name of the proletariat:
Don’t wrangle with us so long as you apply, to our intended abolition of bour-
geois property, the standard of your bourgeois notions of freedom, culture, law
… Your very ideas are but the outgrowth of the conditions of your bourgeois
production and bourgeois property, just as your jurisprudence is but the will of
your class made into a law for all, a will, whose essential character and direc-
tion are determined by the economical conditions of existence of your class.
The revolution could and did bring about the abolition of bourgeois property; but it
could not and was not intended to bring about the immediate abolition of the state
or law.’ As Lenin extolled, the withering away of the state and the substitution of
habit for law at the highest phase of communism would indeed come but, like the
Messiah, only in the indefinite future.’ For the interim, the state and law were to
‘ K. Marx & F. Engels, “Manifesto of the Communist Party” in R.C. Tucker, ed., The Marx-Engels
Reader, 2d ed. (New York: Norton, 1978) at 487 [hereinafter The Marx-Engels Reader].
2 See: K. Marx, “Critique of the Gotha Program” in The Marx-Engels Reader, ibid. at 530-31; V.I.
Lenin, “The State and Revolution: The Marxist Theory of the State and the Tasks of the Proletariat in
the Revolution” in R.C. Tucker, ed., The Lenin Anthology (New York: Norton, 1975) 311 [hereinafter
“Mhe State and Revolution”] Lenin stated:
[]t has never entered into the head of any socialist to “promise” that the higher phase
of the development of communism will arrive; as for the great socialists’ forecast that it
will arrive, it presupposes not the present productivity of labour and not the present
ordinary run of people, who, like the seminary students in Pomyalovsky’s stories, are
capable of damaging the stocks of public wealth “just for fun” and of demanding the
impossible.
Until the “higher” phase of communism arrives, the socialists demand the strictest
control by society and by the state over the measure of labour and the measure of con-
sumption; but this control must start with the expropriation of the capitalists, with the
establishment of workers’ control over the capitalists, and must be exercised not by a
state of bureaucrats, but by a state of anned workers (“State and Revolution”, ibid. at
380).
3Lenin characterized the disappearance of law at the higher stage of communism in this way:
For when all have learned to administer and actually do independently administer
social production, independently keep accounts and exercise control over the parasites,
the sons of the wealthy, the swindlers and other “guardians of capitalist traditions,” the
escape from this popular accounting and control will inevitably become so incredibly
difficult, such a rare exception, and will probably be accompanied by such swift and
severe punishment (for the armed workers are practical men and not sentimental intel-
lectuals, and they will scarcely allow anyone to trifle with them), that the necessity of
observing the simple, fundamental rules of the community will very soon become a
habit (“The State and Revolution”, ibiL at 383-84).
See also, T.W. Waelde & J.L. Gunderson, “Legislative Reform in Transition Economies: Western
MCGILL LAW JOURNAL/REVUE DE DROITDE MCGILL
[Vol. 41
function as instruments of the proletarian dictatorship.
In Russia, that interim lasted over seventy years; elsewhere in Central and East-
em Europe, it lasted two or three decades less. In a manner of speaking, the state
and its laws, as proletarian instrumentality, did wither. There is no small irony to its
withering away so as to make room for capitalism,’ although the absence of fully-
developed capitalism in Russia at the end of the nineteenth century posed a quan-
dary for those who envisaged a communist revolution there.! Moreover, Lenin was
perhaps right to insist upon the role of habit after the state and law had lost their
control. For some, the habit of communism dies hard. The purpose of this Note is to
explore the somewhat elusive function of habit in post-communist societies. Habit,
culture and tradition partly explain the different degrees of success with which
post-communist societies have been managing their legal transition to market
economies.’
I. Variations on the Theme of Market Transition
The pace of economic transformation and, in particular, of privatization has
varied considerably among the countries of the former Soviet bloc, in part, simply
because some countries started the process earlier and, indeed, initially had some-
what differently organized economies. Nevertheless, differences in timing and
starting points cannot fully account for some countries having had more difficulty
than others in shedding the command economy.’ Whether measured according to
Transplants-A Short-Cut to Social Market Economy Status?” (1994) 43 I.C.L.Q. 347 at 348.
‘ In the Afterword to the Second German Edition of Capital (K. Marx, Capital. A Critique of Po-
litical Economy, ed. by E Engels (New York: International, 1967), vol. 1 [hereinafter Capital]), Marx
quotes at length a “striking and … generous” account of his scientific method that had appeared in a
St. Petersburg newspaper (ibid at 19). Marx was apparently pleased by the following description of
his thought: “‘IWn his opinion, every historical period has laws of its own … As soon as a society has
outlived a given period of development, and is passing over from one given stage to another, it begins
to be subject also to other laws’ (European Messenger (May 1872) 427-36, quoted in Capital, ibid.
at 18).
For Marx, the law to which bourgeois capital was subject determined its ultimate overthrow by
communism. One might observe that this law of history displaces the juridical sphere in Marx’s
thought.
‘ Engels expressed great scepticism about the possibility of a communist revolution in Russia be-
fore the onset of communism in the advanced capitalist states of Europe (see F. Engels, “On Social
Relations in Russia” in The Marx-Engels Reader, supra note 1 at 665-75).
6 Arguments linking the legal underpinnings of both markets and commerce to culture have their
origin in: C.L. de Secondat, baron de la Br~de et de Montesquieu, The Spirit of the Laws, trans. T.
Nugent (New York: MacMillan, 1949); M. Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism,
trans. T. Parsons (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1958). H.G. Skilling emphasized the role of
culture in explaining institutional differences among and dissent within the various communist coun-
tries (see: H.G. Skilling, Czechoslovakia’s Interrupted Revolution (Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 1976; A. Brown, ed., Political Culture and Communist Studies (London: MacMillan, 1984)).
‘ See V. Rege, “Economies in Transition and Developing Countries: Prospects for Greater Co-
operation in Trade and Economic Fields” (1993) 27:1 J. World T. 83 at 85-87. Indeed, the factor dis-
19951
R. JANDA – LAW AND THE HABIT OF COMMUNISM
economic indicators –
such as G.D.P. growth (or even non-shrinkage), average per
capita income, proportion of the economy accounted for by the private sector, price
liberalization, unemployment level, inflation rate, debt management and steps to-
ward convertibility of currency’ –
or measured by the extent to which old legal
structures have been dismantled and replaced by new ones,9 a hierarchy of success-
ful and significantly less successful countries is emerging. Suffice it to say that the
Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, the Slovak Republic and Slovenia are placed in
the top economic tier of Central and Eastern European countries, while others are
faring less well.
cussed here – habit, culture or tradition –
helps to explain why some countries began their reform
process earlier and why some preserved elements of a market economy within their command econ-
omy institutions.
‘ See I.M.F, World Economic Outlook, World Economic and Financial Surveys (Washington:
I.M.E, October 1994) at 8, noting progress in the Czech Republic, Hungary, the Slovak Republic,
Slovenia, Albania, the Baltic countries and Mongolia, which have all resumed growth after pursuing
policies of macroeconomic stabilization and structural reform. In contrast, there has been contracting
output in most of the other countries in transition (ibid at 9). Of the countries of the former Soviet
Union, only Armenia, Mongolia and Turkmenistan showed growth in 1994, and Mongolia stands
alone as having had relatively sustained growth (ibid. at 65-66). Albania, Poland, Hungary, the Czech
Republic, the Slovak Republic and Latvia all have close to or in excess of 50% of G.D.P. accounted
for by the private sector (ibid at 65). On the other hand, unemployment has been in the double digits
everywhere except for the Czech Republic (4%), Estonia (7%), Latvia (6%) and Russia (6%) (ibia at
68), and inflation has been in the double digits or more (10,000% in Georgia!) in all countries except
the Czech Republic (9%). Moderate rates were also achieved in Hungary (19%), the Slovak Republic
(14%) and Slovenia (18%) (ibid at 66). “In the group of countries with the most advanced reforms,
the Czech Republic stands out as the only country that has pursued tight financial policies and bold
liberalization while avoiding a sharp rise in open unemployment?’ (ibid at 68). It is also the only
country with a positive trade balance (see OECD, Economic Outlook, N’ 55 (Paris: OECD, 1994) at
118). For another review of the economic performance of transition countries, see W.C. Philbrick,
“The Paving of Wall Street in Eastern Europe: Establishing the Legal Infrastructure for Stock Markets
in the Formerly Centrally Planned Economies” (1994) 25 Law & Pol’y Int’l Bus. 565 at 568-71.
9 See: M. Wierzbowski, “Eastern Europe: Observations and Investment Strategies” (1991) 24 Vand.
L Transnat’l L. 385; C.M. Cole, “Poland, Hungary, and the Czech and Slovak Federal Republic: An
Examination of the Evolving Legal Framework for Foreign Investment” (1992) 7 Am. U. J. Int’l L. &
Pol’y 667. Cheryl Gray, Senior Economist with the World Bank, has coordinated a series of studies of
evolving legal frameworks in Eastern Europe. For accounts of the legal changes in the Czech Repub-
lic, Hungary, Poland and Slovenia, see: C.W. Gray, “The Legal Framework for Private Sector Activity
in the Czech Republic” (1993) 26 Vand. J. Transnat’l L. 271; C.W. Gray, RJ. Hanson & M. Heller,
“Hungarian Legal Reform for the Private Sector” (1992) 26 Geo. Wash. J. Int’l L. & Econ. 293; C.W.
Gray et al., ‘The Legal Framework for Private Sector Development in a Transitional Economy: The
Case of Poland” (1992) 22 Ga. J. Int’l & Comp. L. 283; C.W. Gray & F.D. Stiblar, “The Evolving
Legal Framework for Private Sector Activity in Slovenia” (1993) 14 U. Pa. J. Int’l Bus. L. 119. The
former German Democratic Republic (East Germany) is a special case given the wholesale substitu-
tion of West German legal and economic institutions. This comes, perhaps, at the price of a demoral-
izing sense of colonization in the east and of resentment at an unmanageable level of subsidization in
the west (see: N. Horn, “The Lawful German Revolution: Privatization and Market Economy in a Re-
Unified Germany” (1991) 39 A. M. L Comp. L. 725; H. Seibert, H. Schmieding & P. Nunnenkamp,
“The Transformation of a Socialist Economy: Lessons of German Unification” in G. Winckler, ed.,
Central and Eastern Europe Roads to Growth (Washington: I.M.F., 1992) 62).
HO This “ranking” follows the discussion in RH. Rubin, “Growing a Legal System in the Post-
MCGILL LAW JOURNVAL/REVUE DE DROITDE MCGILL
[Vol. 41
I1. Institutions and the Black Box of ,Culture
A number of commentators have written about the role of law in the transition
to market economies and note that differing legal cultures or traditions play roles in
facilitating or impeding the transformation of the law.” In these accounts, however,
culture appears to be a black box into which are placed all factors escaping defini-
tion and analysis.’2 Can one pry the box open?
Frydman and Rapaczynski begin to do so in their discussion of “markets by
design”.” Neo-classical economics, they note, constructs the model of a market that
achieves equilibrium as a result of the rational choices of individual actors. Fully-
rational choices tending to equilibrium, however, would depend upon perfect in-
formation of a kind that would make centrally-planned economies possible.” In
contrast, choices are made in narrow contexts of partial information; the market is
the aggregate of these choices. Within-the market, institutional patterns of conduct
take on prominence at the frontiers of individual rational choice.” Institutions are,
Communist Economies” (1994) 27 Cornell Int’l L. J. 1 at 25-26.
” See e.g. C.R. Sunstein, “On Property and Constitutionalism” (1993) 14 Cardozo L. Rev. 907,
commenting on the role of constitutions in Eastern Europe. Sunstein asserts that “[a] dramatic legal
and cultural shift, creating a belief in private property and a respect for markets, is indispensable”
(ibid at 922 [emphasis added]). He goes so far as to claim the following:
It is often said that constitutions, as a form of higher law, must be compatible with the
culture and mores of those whom they regulate. In one sense, however, the opposite is
true. Constitutional provisions should be designed to work against precisely those as-
pects of a country’s culture and tradition that are likely to produce harm through that
country’s ordinary political processes (Sunstein, ibid).
Waelde and Gunderson assert that “[lI]aws become effective by social forces and pressures inter-
ested in and working for implementation” (Waelde & Gunderson, supra note 3 at 360) and that “legal
reform must be carried out carefully so that it nurtures development of a capitalist ‘mind set’ rather
than incites nationalist rejection” (ibid at 362). They suggest that any legal transplants take careful
account of indigenous legal cultures. B. Rudden, “Civil Law, Civil Society, and the Russian Constitu-
tion”(1994) 110 L. Q. Rev. 56, draws attention to the “strident Soviet tradition of stem virtue which
assigned to the law a function fulfilled in other epochs by the sermon …” (ibid. at 82).
‘2 R. Frydman & A. Rapaczynski, “Privatization and Corporate Governance in Eastern Europe: Can
a Market Economy be.Designed?”, in Winckler, ed., supra note 9,255.
I/bid at 285.
“Information technologies are beginning to approximate conditions of perfect information, at least
in some markets. In such markets, bounded rationality consists not so much in absence of information
as in limited capacity to organize, assimilate and apply information. Nevertheless, it has become in-
creasingly plausible to speak of: (1) individuals having the same capacity (including low costs) to
generate information as large firms; and (2) markets segmented down to the specific preferences of
individuals. To the extent that propositions (1) and (2) obtain in real markets, contracting can occur
without the intermediary of firms. A completely dispersed atomistic market characterized by perfect
information would at the same time be the perfectly planned economy. This reflection was prompted
by M. Hopper, “Competing in a Networked World” (Remarks presented to the Centre for the Study of
Regulated Industries, Interdisciplinary Seminar Series, McGill University, Montreal, Canada, 26
January 1995) [unpublished].
” See S. Schiavo-Campo, “Institutional Change and the Public Sector. Towards a Strategic Frame-
19951
R. JANDA – LAW AND THE HABIT OF COMMUNISM
thus, crucial to the functioning of markets because they generate the confidence
necessary for choices to be actualized even in the absence of perfect information. In
this sense, they are necessary conditions for the existence of markets. Yet, institu-
tions are characterized “by an irreducible element of contingency, idiosyncracy, and
cultural specificity”.” Furthermore, not all possible institutional arrangements rein-
force the aggregation of choice in the market. Some arrangements, such as those
perpetuated by the state under communism, accomplish the opposite. Frydman and
Rapaczynski conclude:
We have thus the makings of a genuine paradox that constitutes the most
fundamental systemic obstacle to the economic transformation in Eastern
Europe: the most important aspect of the transition to a spontaneously function-
ing market economy cannot be initiated by market forces themselves. Indeed,
the only force powerful enough to set market forces in motion is the very state
that is supposed to remove itself from the picture. 7
III. The Paradox of Spontaneous Markets
The paradox that a “spontaneously functioning market economy”‘” cannot bring
itself into being has to do more with the term “spontaneous” than with the term
“market”. It could be caricatured thus: everyone will naturally adopt rational mar-
ket behaviour unless there is some externally imposed force –
“market interven-
that prevents it. Just as deregulation in western industrialized countries re-
tion” –
moves market intervention and, therefore, unleashes “spontaneous” market forces
of competition, so too the removal of an albeit more massive market intervention –
the centrally planned economy – will unleash the market. Such arguments give rise
that the collapse of communism will inevitably unleash a
to
“spontaneous” market economy. If one adopts this fallacy as a premise, the notion
that the “force” of the state is needed to set market forces in motion is indeed para-
doxical.
the fallacy
work” in S. Schiavo-Campo, ed., Institutional Change and the Public Sector in Transitional Econo-
mies, World Bank Discussion Paper No. 241 (Washington: The World Bank, 1994) 3, where, drawing
on Douglass North, he gives the following account of institutions:
Institutions comprise both formal and informal rules and procedures-which extend
to cultural habits and psychological variables, including “commercial morality”, which
is essential for a well-functioning market economy but is nonexistent or rudimentary in
most transition economies. Formal rules can be changed overnight, but informal rules
cannot. The implication is that real institutional change is always slower than was fore-
seen or can be visible on the surface. Rapid institutional change on the surface may go
hand-in-hand with a frozen set of informal rules below the surface, yielding little or no
behavioral improvement and presenting the agent of change with an apparent paradox
(Schiavo-Campo, ibid. at 4).
16 Frydman & Rapaczynski in Winckler, ed., supra note 9 at 265.
,7 Ibid at 267. See also E. Klingsberg, “The State Rebuilding Civil Society: Constitutionalism and
‘8Frydman & Rapaczynski in Winckler, ed., ibid
the Post-Communist Paradox” (1992) 13 Mich. J. Int’l L. 865.
McGILL LAW JouRNAL/REvuE DE DROITDE MCGILL
[Vol. 41
The theorist of “spontaneous orders”, Friedrich von Hayek, may be blamed for
the pedigree of this fallacy,’9 but he cannot be charged with the fallacy itself.
Hayek’s conception of the spontaneous order of the market was, indeed, the result
of his reflection upon communism and central planning.” Commenting on Marx’s
mistaken belief that capitalism and market economies were characterized by
“chaos”, Hayek remarks: “Karl Marx was completely unaware of the manner in
which appropriate rules of individual conduct induce the formation of an order …..2
That is, the spontaneous order of the market is brought into being by appropriate
rules of individual conduct. The market is a spontaneous order not in the sense that
it arises without an exogenous cause, but because once established, it can align and
coordinate the multiplicity of human preferences without the exogenous determi-
nation of outcomes.’ Hayek says a spontaneous order “results from the individual
elements adapting themselves to circumstances which directly affect only some of
them, and which in their totality need not be known to anyone …….
Thus, the ideas
of dispersed knowledge and limits to the range of individual rational choice,
“bounded rationality”, are embedded in Hayek’s concept of spontaneous order.
This, in turn, means that Hayek is able to accept the notion that institutional pat-
terns of conduct –
take on
prominence at the frontiers of individual rational choice and underpin the sponta-
neous order of the market.
he uses the term “favourable moral traditions”‘
–
IV. Markets, Culture and Trust
What characterizes the favourable moral traditions that underpin the market?
Mark Casson has attempted to answer this question by describing “the cultural de-
9 EA. von Hayek, Law, Legislation and Liberty, vol. 3 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
1979) [hereinafter Law, Legislation and Liberty (vol. 3)].
20 See RA. von Hayek, The Road to Serfdom (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1944)
at 72-87.
2,Law, Legislation and Liberty (vol. 3), supra note 19 at 169. Hayek goes on to note that Marx mis-
understood how the market’s prime mechanism provided a signal for future conduct. For Hayek, rules
of individual conduct induce the formation of the market, which, in turn, channels conduct.
22 See F.A. von Hayek, Law, Legislation and Liberty, vol. 1 (Chicago: Chicago University Press,
1973) at 36.
23Ibid. at 41. One might wonder whether the choice of the adjective “spontaneous” was felicitous
given the idea Hayek is conveying here. It is not so much that markets result from a natural impulse
and are automatic or, to use current vocabulary, “autopoetic” systems. The key to Hayek’s thinking is
that the market order results from the acts of multiple decision-makers rather than from a single or
generalized will. As he puts it: “The possibility of men living together in peace-and to their mutual
advantage without having to agree on common concrete aims, and bound only by abstract rules of
conduct, was perhaps the greatest discovery mankind ever made” (F.A. von Hayek, Law, Legislation
and Liberty, vol. 2 (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1976) at 136 [footnotes omitted]). Perhaps
the term “pluralistic order” captures this idea better.
” Law, Legislation and Liberty (vol. 3), supra note 19 at 169. For recent empirical analysis in the
post-communist context, see . Kubik, “The Role of Decentralization and Cultural Revival in Post-
Communist Transformations” (1994) 27 Communist & Post-Communist Stud. 331.
1995]
R. JANDA – LAW AND THE HABIT OF COMMUNISM
terminants of economic performance”. He identifies one characteristic that has
special significance for the former communist countries: high levels of trust. ‘
Given that widespread opportunistic behaviour –
cheating on contracts, for exam-
ple –
can undermine contracting itself “[tlhe question then arises as to whether
people can be trusted to honor contracts even when it is not in their material inter-
ests to do so.”” The problem of individual opportunistic behaviour can be ad-
dressed through reliable enforcement of private law. However, the willingness of
contractors to rely upon law enforcement, in turn, depends upon perceptions of the
trustworthiness of those responsible for the administration of the law. Niklas
Luhmann generalizes the role of trust and confidence:
economic, legal, or political –
[L]ack of confidence and the need for trust may form a vicious circle. A system
–
requires trust as an input condition. Without
trust it cannot stimulate supportive activities in situations of uncertainty or risk.
At the same time, the structural and operational properties of such a system
may erode confidence and thereby undermine one of the essential conditions of
trust!’
The growth of disclosure-based stock markets in the more successful transi-
tional economies provides evidence of both growing market confidence, and that
firms in these countries are investing in their reputations.”
” M. Casson, “Cultural Determinants of Economic Performance” (1993) 17 J. Comp. Econ. 418.
26 See also: N. Luhmann, Trust and Power (Chichester. Wiley, 1979); B. Barber, The Logic and
Limits of Trust (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1983); D. Gambetta, ed., Trust:
Making and Breaking Cooperative Relations (New York: Blackwell, 1988). In characterizing his un-
derstanding of trust, Barber notes: “Luhman [sic] and I regard trust primarily as a phenomenon of
social structural and cultural variables and not, as it has been treated in the social-psychology work…
as a function of individual personality variables” (Barber, ibid at 5).
2’7 Casson, supra note 25 at 426. On opportunistic behaviour in post-communist countries, see Ru-
bin, supra note 10 at 13-16. On the theory of opportunistic behaviour, see O.E. Williamson, The Eco-
nomic Institutions of Capitalism: Firms, Markets, Relational Contracting (New York: Free Press,
1985).
28 N. Luhmann, “Familiarity, Confidence, Trust: Problems and Alternatives”, in Gambetta, ed., su-
pra note 26, 93 at 103. Luhmann distinguishes between confidence and trust as two forms of faith in
the fulfillment of expectations. Trust is engaged where that faith depends upon conscious undertaking
of risk –
for example, hiring someone. Confidence is reposed where a relationship is understood as
unavoidable –
for example, relying on the police. In Luhmann’s terms, relationships of trust can
transpose into relationships of confidence and vice versa (see Luhmann in Gambetta, ed., ibid
at 97-98).
29 See Philbrick, supra note 8. See also S. Wolff, P. Thompson & D. Nelson, “Securities Regulation
in Central Europe: Hungary and Czechoslovakia” (1992) 21 Deny. J. Int’l L. & Pol’y 103. One anec-
dote illustrates this in striking fashion. Two years ago, I bought some porcelain in Prague and was as-
sured by the shopkeeper, whom I had never met before, that it would be packed so as to survive the
flight to Montreal. When I unpacked the boxes, I discovered that a number of pieces were broken. I
wrote to express my dissatisfaction and expected nothing more to come of it. When I arrived in
Prague the following year on another trip, a replacement package of porcelain was waiting for me.
MCGILL LAW JOuRNAL/REvuE DE DROITDE McGLL
[Vol. 41
V. Mafias, Communism and Distrust
On the other hand, evidence abounds of widespread opportunistic behaviour in
Russia.” Indeed, generalized distrust breeds secretiveness in business relations,
which in turn impedes the building of reputations for trustworthiness,” including
that of legal institutions. The most dramatic manifestation of generalized distrust is
the emergence of mafia behaviour touching upon large portions of the economy.”
Gambetta has elucidated the relationship between a situation of generalized
distrust in civil society of Southern Italy and the emergence of the mafia there.” He
hypothesizes that a generalized sense of distrust was first spread under Habsburg-
Spanish domination, at which time “a bewildering and sophisticated array” of di-
vide et impera strategies were implemented by the rulers,
ranging from discouraging commerce and the production of wealth to the ma-
nipulation of information; from fostering religious superstition to establishing
vertical bonds of submission and exploitation at the expense of solidarity be-
tween equals; from destroying equality before the law to overturning the rela-
tionship between the sexes.’
This generalized sense of distrust was, and is, then reproduced and exploited by the
mafioso who, on the one hand, is able to “protect” the performance of provident
transactions through threat of violence and, on the other hand, acts through
“regulated injections of distrust” (that is, taking advantage of “unprotected” parties)
to “increase the demand for the product he sells –
that is, protection”.” Gambetta’s
insight is that the mafia’s endurance, certainly for over a century, is not only attrib-
30 See: Rubin, supra note 10 at 17-18; I. Bird, “The Unique Challenges of Practicing Law in the
Russian Federation” (Faculty of Law, McGill University, 1995) [unpublished].
“See Rubin, ibid at 10.
“Professor Yakov Gilinskij of the European University of St. Petersburg has conducted interviews
with businesspersons in that city and has managed to trace out the scope of mafia behaviour. He cites
the following opinion offered by an interviewee:
100% of commercial structures are embraced by [the] racket, except the ones located
in the premises of large-scale state-owned enterprises, or the ones … which have not yet
begun making profit. [The] [r]acket [has] penetrated all the enterprises except those of
[the] military-industrial complex and some foreign firms (Y Gilinskij, “‘Black Market’
and Organized Crime in Russia” (European University, St. Petersburg, 1993) at 5
[unpublished]).
Gilinskij’s own conclusion is that “criminalization of the entire national economy has occured”
(ibid.). Also, see generally S. Handelman, Comrade Criminal: The Theft of the Second Russian
Revolution (London: Michael Joseph, 1994).
3 See D. Gambetta, “Mafia: the Price of Distrust”, in Gambetta, ed., supra note 26, 158 [hereinafter
“The Price of Distrust” in Gambetta, ed.].
34Ibid. at 159, where Gambetta draws on the account of A. Pagden, “The Destruction of Trust and
its Economic Consequences in the Case of Eighteenth-century Naples”, in Gambetta, ed., supra note
26, 127.
“5 “The Price of Distrust” in Gambetta, ed., ibid at 173.
1995]
R. JANDA – LAWAND THE HABiT OF COMMUNISM
utable to its threats of violence but also stems from its capacity to create demand
for its services –
demand which, in turn, is dependent upon mafia capacity to
maintain distrust in transactions. He therefore reaches the remarkable conclusion
that “in a world of the mafia monopoly a reliable market is a contradiction in terms
and is not likely to come about, or at least to spread, ‘naturally’.” ‘ The paradox of
spontaneous markets is, thus, amplified. Within the vicious circle of distrust not
only are “market forces” insufficient to bring the market into being, but conduct
tends “spontaneously” to undermine markets. Yet, this circle is breakable.”
What Gambetta calls the “self-reinforcing behavioural expressions”” of distrust
secrecy, duplicity, information intelligence and betrayal – were all systemati-
–
cally employed by the communist regime. Just as mafia behaviour would appear
to have emerged with the removal of the force that had destroyed civil society in
Southern Italy and thrived under democracy, so too mafia behaviour and bribe-
taking have gained pre-eminence with the fall of communism.’
Interestingly
enough, Gambetta notes a reverse phenomenon through which the mafia is curbed
and is replaced by “another –
bigger and better – mafia'”‘ under centralized,
authoritarian and military rule. This happened in some measure under Mussolini,
with the resulting slogan of “better the mafia than fascism”. Will Russians adopt the
slogan, “better the mafia than communism”? Will mafia institutions in Russia and
other post-communist countries be as self-reproducing and durable as those in
Southern Italy? Moreover, will they succeed, as in Southern Italy, in continuing to
discredit legal institutions? These questions remain unanswered.
36 Ibd at 167.
” The recent Italian war on corruption –
tutions can themselves become agents for generating trust
“The Price of Distrust’ in Gambetta, ed., supra note 26 at 166.
the revolution by the judges –
illustrates that legal insti-
39Casson also observes:
Low trust is a legacy of Stalinism. The overcentralization of planning discredited the
planner and, by implication, top enterprise managers too. The rigidity of senior officials
in maintaining technically unrealistic production targets to maximize the output of ob-
solete consumer goods left considerable cynicism at lower levels of the enterprise sys-
tem. Furthermore, the privileges conferred on party activists and the widespread use of
informers discouraged the open expression of dissenting views and hence disabled
group-centered problem solving (Casson, supra note 25 at 431).
Ironically, state enterprises, which had some national prestige at stake in performing their interna-
tional obligations, are often more reliable partners for foreign investors than firms in the emerging
private sector (see Bird, supra note 30).
‘ Gambetta notes that for mafia behaviour to emerge, absence of trustworthy legal institutions and
commercial relations must be conjoined with opportunities for social mobility (“The Price of Dis-
trust” in Gambetta, ed., supra note 26 at 163-64). This provides incentives for monopolistic rent-
seeking and results in prominent mafiosi affecting middle class respectability. Russian economist
Evgenii Starikov has elaborated the dangers of tolerating the mafia as a precursor to the development
of a market economy (E. Starikov, “A Bazaar, Not a Market” (1994) 37:2 Probs. Econ. Transition 14).
” “The Price of Distrust” in Gambetta, ed., ibid. at 167.
MCGILL LAw JOURNAL/REVUE DEDROITDEMCGILL
[Vol. 41
VT. The Apotheosis and Destruction of Civil Society
The notion that communism destroyed civil society, and entrenched habits of
distrust, draws on a substantial literature that has developed around the concept of
“civil society.””2 Like the term “culture”, the term “civil society” is protean and can
serve simply to encapsulate all the virtues that are taken to be absent from commu-
nist societies and miraculously present in liberal democracies. 3 Three different
features of civil society are usually emphasized: (1) it is a public sphere of activity
notionally prior to and autonomous from the state; (2) it comprises a collection of
voluntary associations; and (3) it is characterized by virtues of civility.” Following
Shils, I shall employ the term loosely as combining these three features, although
they stand in some tension with each other.”‘
Ironically, Marxism, in its revolutionary practice and aspirations, can be seen as
the apotheosis of civil society. The idea of class consciousness dramatises and gives
a critical edge to the looser notion of public opinion. The dictatorship of the prole-
tariat personifies those in civil society who would challenge the State’s power in the
name of self-determination. The withering away of the State would be the anarchic
triumph of civil society. How, then, did the apotheosis of ciFil society become the
enemy of civil society?
The morality play that was the final struggle between the proletariat and the
bourgeoisie depicted a reduction of civil society into one simple conflict.’ That re-
42 See especially: E. Shils, “The Virtue of Civil Society” (1991) 26 Gov’t & Oppos. 3; A. Arato,
“Revolution, Civil Society and Democracy” (1990) 10:1/2 Praxis International 24; J.L. Cohen & A.
Arato, Civil Society and Political Theory (Cambridge, Mass.: M.I.T. Press, 1992); J. Keane, ed., Civil
Society and the State: New European Perspectives (London: Verso, 1988).
41 Indeed, Ernest Gellner writes of the “miracle of Civil Society” that occured in the west (E. Gell-
ner, Conditions of Liberty: Civil Society and its Rivals (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1994) at 32).
“Indeed, Shils, supra note 42 at 4, simply combines these elements into a multi-faceted definition
of civil society. See also C. Taylor, “Modes of Civil Society” (1990) 3 Public Culture 95, where he
masterfully
through history and unearths tensions between Locke’s
“autonomous public sphere” and Montesquieu’s “corps intermdiares”.
traces these elements
4 Other uses of the term are less helpful. Sometimes it is understood as an open zone for private
choices about the “good life” and seems to collapse into a certain liberal -if not libertarian –
theory
of politics, ignoring the public character of civil society. Sometimes it is understood as co-terminus
with the market and the invisible hand, ignoring the collective responsibilty of civil society. Michael
Ignatieff understands “civil society” to involve a commitment to negative liberty: “Liberty in civil
society is essentially negative because there cannot be, in principle, agreement among human beings
about the positive ends of political communities, beyond the protection of the liberties of the indi-
viduals who compose it” (M. Ignatieff, “On Civil Society: Why Eastern Europe’s Revolutions Could
Succeed” (1995) 74:2 Foreign Affairs 128 at 130). G.M. Tamfs decries such a “doxophilic” civil so-
ciety as a reinvention of communism (G.M. Tamits, “A Disquisition on Civil Society” (1994) 61 Soc.
Res. 205). However, these accounts underplay the efforts made to reconstitute the integrity of social
institutions as part of the reconstruction of civil society.
“6See C. Schmitt, The Crisis of Parliamentary Democracy, trans. E. Kennedy (Cambridge: M.I.T.
Press, 1985) at 59-60.
1995]
R. JANDA – LAWAND THE HABIT OF COMMUNISM
duction was pursued under the dictatorship of the proletariat through political lit-
mus-tests and purges at all levels of society. Thus, the Marxist apotheosis of civil
society entailed that civil society speak with one voice. The champions of historical
necessity displayed no modesty in the face of differing views. Since the proletarian
state and proletarian civil society spoke with the same voice, the distinction be-
tween state and civil society blended away. Scouts became Young Pioneers, artists
became socialist realists and religion became state orthodoxy.
Diversity in a functioning civil society is based on modesty and prudence, not
on amorality or relativism. Civil society does not speak with a single voice because
any grasp of the “good” is partial. Other opinions deserve respect because they may
shed light on the truth. Civil society ought, therefore, to embrace both the rivalry
and respect of ideas and institutions. Communism, however, destroyed both rivalry
and respect.
VHI.
Reconstituting Civil Society: Parallel Cultures Under Communism
The breakdown of civil society under communism and the creation of a culture
of distrust work against the emergence of market economies. The surprising phe-
nomenon, therefore, is not so much the rise of mafias and the painful transition to
the market in Russia and elsewhere in Eastern Europe but, rather, the relative suc-
cesses observed in the leading post-communist economies. If a culture of distrust
partly accounts for market failure, how was that culture displaced in the successful
countries?
Culture, if defined as “collective subjectivity”‘ or as the sum of achievements
and practices of a particular collectivity, tends to be understood as a given determi-
nant of conduct. The more traditional definition of culture, as training or refinement
of the mind, reinforces the notion that culture is not only a condition determining
behaviour but also derives from creative acts. We make and shape our culture, we
are not simply made and shaped by it. Nor is culture a homogeneous phenomenon
in a collectivity; it is composed of sometimes rival and contradictory traditions, ex-
pressions and teachings. As different cultural strands are followed in the public
imagination, habits change, traditions are re-interpreted, and culture is transformed.
The cultural transformation that has occurred in some countries of Central and
Eastern Europe has to do with what Vdclav Havel, writing eleven years before the
Velvet Revolution, referred to as “parallel structures” and a “second culture” nur-
tured by dissidents.’ My main claim is that the parallel culture, while representing
only a strand of society, made it possible to attempt a redemption of the whole of
civil society after the fall of communism. In particular, this culture fostered trust or,
47 Casson, supra note 25 at 420.
“‘ V. Havel, “The Power of the Powerless” in J. Vladislav, ed., Vdclav Havel or Living in Truth
(London: Faber & Faber, 1986) 36 at 100-101.
MCGILL LAW JOURNAL/REVUE DE DROITDE MCGILL
[Vol. 41
at least, a shedding of the communist habit of distrust. It facilitated the process by
which legal institutions were reinvested with confidence, and it became a touch-
stone for a rediscovered morality of the marketplace.
The parallel culture consisted of myriad artistic, political and philosophical ex-
pressions symbolized by figures such as Lech Walesa and V~clav Havel and by
events such as the 1956 Hungarian uprising. Parallel institutions were formed –
parallel unions, parallel universities, parallel publishing houses and to some extent
even a parallel economy.’ These institutions were in many instances only embry-
onic, but they represented the commitment and aspiration to a broader social trans-
formation: they were meant to “foreshadow a general solution”.’
Unlike Russia, where a parallel culture also developed but arguably in less
elaborate form, the parallel culture in the most successful post-communist countries
was built, in part, on the notion that communism was an externally-imposed lie.
The parallel culture sustained pre-communist traditions and, in many instances, was
comprised of small acts, such as maintaining a semblance of commercial bookkeep-
ing practices or sharing non-Marxist textbooks. This allowed many ordinary people
to maintain the conviction that under the surface of day-to-day practices compelled
by a corrupt system there lurked another set of only partly-suppressed practices. In
Russia, the communist revolution was a Russian heritage, and the pre-communist
tradition was a more distant and, indeed, unhappy memory. It was much more diffi-
cult, therefore, for Russians to embrace the parallel culture as a basis for revaluing
social institutions. By contrast, the Czechs, Hungarians, Poles and Slovaks, despite
the degree to which they had been co-opted by communism, could be convinced
that the parallel culture was the truer image of themselves.”
VIn. Law and the Parallel Culture
In considering the function of a parallel culture, Vdclav Havel placed great em-
phasis upon resurrecting respect for the law.52 The communist state was “utterly ob-
sessed with the need to bind everything in a single order: life in such a state is thor-
oughly permeated by a dense network of regulations, proclamations, directives,
49 See Havel in Vladislav, ed., ibid. at 101.
50/id
at 103.
” For an empirical analysis of this phenomenon, see G. Vainshtein, “Totalitarian Public Conscious-
ness in a Post-Totalitarian Society: The Russian Case in the General Context of Post-Communist De-
velopments” (1994) 27 Communist & Post-Communist Stud. 247. An analogy can be made to the
mythical function of the French Resistance for the whole of France after World War II. If a parallel
culture plays the role of redeeming the whole of civil society, can that society bear to look upon the
extent of corruption and collaboration in the past? “Lustration” statutes aiming to cast fight on the
extent of past corruption have not been enforced with great rigour in part because too many people
would come under the glare of scrutiny (see V. Cepl, “Lustration in the C.ES.R.: Ritual Sacrifices”
[Spring 1992] E. Euro. Const. Rev. 94. See also C.C. Bertschi, “Lustration and the Transition to De-
mocracy: The Cases of Poland and Bulgaria” (1995) 28 E. Eur. Q. 435).
52Havel in Vladislav, ed., supra note 48 at 90.
19951
R. JANDA – LAW AND THE HABIT OF COMMUNISM
norms, orders and rules.’ ‘ 3 Over time, as communist ideology was hollowed-out
and lost all semblance of persuasive appeal, the state borrowed a fragile legitimacy
by adopting the facade and ritual of legality; at the same time, however, it flaunted
the law at its convenience. The facade of legality allowed the vast majority of those
who participated in and applied the communist order to ease their consciences, for
they could pretend that they were merely applying the law.
Within the parallel culture, the purely instrumental legalism of the communist
state was exposed in the name of law. Dissidents repeatedly challenged the state to
uphold its own laws. Not to do so –
simply to proclaim that legality was a facade
– would have been to succumb to the corrupting idea that law consists only in
manipulation. Rather, “[d]emanding that the laws be upheld [was] thus an act of
living within the truth that threaten[ed] the whole mendacious structure at its point
of maximum mendacity.’ 5 ‘ Demanding that the laws be upheld revealed the charac-
ter of the law under communism but, at the same time, highlighted a different way
of interpreting and applying law. This especially confronted the consciences of
those who were content to hide behind the facade of legality.
By placing fidelity to the law at the centre of the parallel culture, dissidents
were able to construct an alternate normalcy for the functioning of legal institu-
tions. In the absence of communism, it would be normal for officials and citizens to
behave truthfully and for others to repose trust in them. After the fall of commu-
nism, fidelity to law could become a standard that guided the conduct even of those
who had been previously co-opted. This standard helped to break the habit of
communism.
Conclusion
In liberal democratic societies, we take a great deal for granted about the func-
tioning of markets and of law. Markets are seen as “spontaneous” emanations of
human nature. The rule of law becomes a slogan and a formula. We rely heavily on
habits of the marketplace and habits of legality. Yet, the experience of post-
communist societies teaches us that the morality of the marketplace, grounded in
trust and fiduciary conduct, is a fragile cultural achievement. Fidelity to law flows
from a conviction that each shares responsibility for all.
The successful post-communist societies have benefited from a parallel culture,
which was nurtured under communism, to begin the restoration of trust and fidelity
to law. In so doing, they join the community of liberal democracies and may help to
show those habit-driven societies how to revive their own cultural vibrancy.
Ibid at 94.
5Ibid at 98.
