This Article notes Derrida’s deconstructive understanding of the relation
between the law and the justice in his writing, The Power of the Law(Force de
loi). His deconstruction is the other name of the justice. Derrida questions the
ordinary understanding about the relation both them, thus notes the impossibility
of the law. Derrida doses not admit the idea that the law could achieve the
justice through the force of the law, because the law might have the force as a
kind of violence immanently in the process of the founding and perceiving of
it. He thinks that there is the necessity of the deconstruction of the law
because of the inner violence. He puts the problem of the justification of the
law according to the deconstructive hermeneutics. For him the deconstruction
moves between the law and the justice without fixation. The specter among
texts and contexts prohibits the fixation of the law as generality, but appears
between them as traces among them. This characteristic of the justice makes
the perseverance of the identity of the law stop, thus makes ways to call the
justice for others. The infinite, unaccountable and un-ruled justice deconstructs
the law, thus others are coming through the process. The justice is not
restricted by the law but beyond the law, thus reconstructs it. Derrida, through
the way of deconstruction, tries to argue the possibility of language in the law
defined by the justice as the others.