Glasnik Advokatske komore Vojvodine (Jan 2020)
A critique of the jusnaturalist notion of marriage: A view from Italian legal practice
Abstract
This paper attempts to answer the following research question: What is modern marriage? The author combines the critical analysis of the jusnaturalist view, more precisely the notion of marriage in the work of Robert George, with a conceptual analysis of marriage in the process of its transformation. In order to do this, the author examines the case of Italy, a society with a traditional, Catholic jusnaturalist conception of marriage, which enables testing the jusnaturalist view of marriage and pointing out what makes it dysfunctional in practice. Then, I examine how well-founded the constituent components of the notion of "real marriage" are, both in the context of modern marriage and within George's conception of marriage itself. The paper's central argument is that marriage is a legal institution undergoing the process of redefining that involves an expansion of participants and a redistribution of the hitherto known functions of marriage. It is the author's standpoint that there is a methodological possibility to functionally yet neutrally explain the nature of law, and so the institution of marriage. Thus the author arrives at the new function of modern marriage and brings a value-neutral definition of modern marriage based on the idea of a privileged emotional relationship.
Keywords