Contrast to extant system Sachs and others rejected the idea that the
Constitutional Court of South Africa, on which he sat, was a dikastocracy; using the name to denote what they asserted the Court not to be. It was used in a 1996 Court opinion that rejected the "horizontal" application (between citizens as opposed to "vertical" application between citizens and the government) of the RSA constitution's
Bill of Rights and warned that "horizontal" application would turn the republic into such a dikastocracy. Others have similarly used this as an inverse definition to denote what they assert their form of government is not.
Supreme Court of the United States justice
Stanley Forman Reed, the last dissenter to be convinced in the decision on
Brown v. Board of Education used kritarchy as the name for the
judicial activism that he initially dissented from, asking his clerk (John Fassett) who argued with the direction to write a dissenting opinion whether he (Fassett) favoured a kritarchy. Fassett was unfamiliar with the word, and Reed told him to look it up. Fassett could not find it in several dictionaries, finally locating it in the
Oxford English Dictionary. The actual term that Reed used was "krytocracy" and he described it as a "government by judges."
According to van Notten This form of rule (in the non-Biblical sense) is the case of
Somalia, ruled by judges with the
polycentric legal tradition of
xeer. The definition employed by
Michael van Notten (based upon one by
Frank van Dun) is not, strictly, that of rule by judges, judges not being a formal political class but rather people selected at random to perform that task ad hoc; but rather is that of a legal and political system whose closest analogue in other societies is that of a system based entirely upon customary rather than statutory law.
George Ayittey referred to this as a "near-Kritarchy". Van Notten himself argues that with few exceptions, the system of government which he denotes a kritarchy is "harmonious with the concept of
natural law" and "very close to what in philosophy might be called 'the natural order of human beings'".
Heterodox opinions In the opinion of
libertarian anthropologist
Spencer McCallum, the kritarchy represents the governance of stateless societies, explaining that Somali tribal governments were made up of courts and part-time police. == Potential kritarchies ==