Nadia, thanks for posting this! I think you raise some very important questions, some of which I have considered before and others which are new to me. I agree that justice is subjective, and that the differences between our conceptions of justice are what generates these questions you posed, but I think saying it's merely subjective doesn't go quite far enough.
In my opinion, the problem here is that we like to think of justice as something that can be "achieved." Yes, it is definitely an aspiration that guides our practice of the law (hopefully/ideally), but I don't think justice is a definitive point that can be reached. Even if we all differ on what we think justice really is, it would still imply that we have some more concrete idea of what would constitute justice. I'm thinking of justice in the way that I would think about the word "home." We all agree that "home" is a place that exists, although the place you think of when I say "home" is different from the place I think of. We both still have an idea of what the right "home" is.
With justice, it seems we define what it is only by identifying what it isn't. We should do A because B would be unjust, which must mean that A is justice. I think that logical leap--because B is unjust, A, it's opposite, is just--is misguided. I would propose that justice is a feeling. It can't be achieved. It's not a real outcome. It's a mental representation that we can all understand as being the outcome that makes us feel the most positive--and that positivity may not even come close to what we might feel is "true" justice, because "true" justice is never an option. It's more like a benchmark. In other words, we think getting as close as we can to justice is justice.
In response to your more concrete questions, I think my conception of justice makes sense. Take the example of BLM and police brutality: We want justice for the atrocities that have already happened, but the outcome we really hope for is that there are legal repercussions for officers who shoot-first-ask-later. But no possible repercussion could "correct" the injustice that has already happened. Justice is not a balancing act. No consequence will be equivalent to the value of lost lives--but it will be the closest we can get. Justice, in that sense, is the acknowledgement of injustice.
And as for finding justice: I think trying to find it is a journey without an end. In practical application, I think we should aspire to justice, but focus on injustice, which (unfortunately) is much easier to locate.
-- CeciliaPlaza - 31 Jan 2018 |