The paper analyzes the complex relationship between law and morality. The aim of the paper is to investigate, through a critical analysis of different positions, to what extent law must be morally grounded, that is, to what extent morality constitutes an integral or necessary element of law, as well as what consequences this relationship has for the legitimacy and validity of legal norms. The issue of the relationship between law and morality becomes relevant in the case of regulating morally controversial social phenomena, as well as in cases where positive law contradicts the prevailing moral understanding of the social community. The authors point out that the moral component of law refers to the ethical principles and values that underlie legal norms and influence their creation, interpretation, and application. Not everything that is legal is moral. Morality serves as a criterion for reviewing legal norms and their fairness. When law is separated from morality, it can become a means of injustice.
Kulić et al. (Wed,) studied this question.