It is taken for granted by most people that the rule of law requires a state. Spencer Heath MacCallum challenges that assumption in an essay entitled “The Rule of Law without the State.”
Mr. MacCallum’s proof case is none other then Somalia. This might be a little hard for some people to swallow, but the fact is that Somalia has done better by all relevant statistics since its central government was abolished. It has even improved relative to other African countries.
Now correlation does not prove causation, so Macallum’s statistics don’t prove anything. But reading this essay reminded me of Samuel’s lecture to Israelites when they asked for a king. Especially since customary law the world over tends to have a lot of similarities with the Old Testament law.