Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover
- Half title
- Title page
- Imprints page
- Contents
- Figures
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- Rewards of jurisprudence
- Jurisprudence
- Legal theory
- Analytical and normative jurisprudence
- Law
- The quest for a definition of law
- The arrangement of the contents of this book
- Old debates and new frontiers
- Part 1 Law as it is
- 2 British legal positivism
- Positivism and logical positivism
- Positivism
- Logical positivism
- Nature of scientific knowledge
- Legal positivism
- Scientific, normative and hybrid theories of legal positivism
- Legal positivism and legal realism
- A continental beginning
- Thomas Hobbes and Leviathan
- Jeremy Bentham: law and the principle of utility
- Bentham’s definition of law
- Source of law – the sovereign within a state
- The will of the sovereign
- Subjects and objects of a law
- Forms of law
- Parts of a law
- Bentham’s contempt for the common law
- John Austin’s command theory of law
- Austin’s utilitarianism
- Austin’s respect for the common law
- Austin’s taxonomy
- Laws properly so called and positive law
- Laws improperly so called
- Austin’s positive law
- Sovereign
- 1. The sovereign is a determinate human superior
- 2. The bulk of the people habitually obey the sovereign
- 3. The sovereign is not in the habit of obedience to any other human superior
- 4. The sovereign’s power cannot be legally limited
- 5. Sovereignty is indivisible
- The problem of the sovereign in representative democracy
- Command, duty, sanction
- Law and morality
- Austin’s achievement
- Recommended further reading
- 3 Herbert Hart’s new beginning and new questions
- Rules and obligations
- Obligation
- Rules and commands
- External and internal aspects of a legal rule
- Nature of rules: the element of uncertainty
- Primary and secondary rules of obligation: emergence of a legal system
- The rule of recognition
- Some questions concerning the concept of the rule of recognition
- Courts and the rule of recognition
- Public opinion and the rule of recognition
- Developed legal systems without a rule of recognition
- International law
- Law and morality
- British positivism’s contribution to jurisprudence
- Recommended further reading
- 4 Germanic legal positivism
- From empiricism to transcendental idealism
- From transcendental idealism to the pure theory of law
- Law as norm
- Nature of norm
- Commands, authorisations and permissions
- Legislation, legal norm and statement of the law
- Distinguishing legal and moral norms
- Legal order as a coercive order
- Legal order is a dynamic order
- Validity and the basic norm
- Basic norm of customary law systems
- Logic of presupposing the basic norm
- Effectiveness and validity of the basic norm
- Logical unity of the legal order and determining whether a norm belongs to the legal order
- Membership of a legal order
- The criticism of Joseph Raz
- Legitimacy and revolution
- Revolution
- Consensual revolution
- Revolution by use of force
- Effects of revolution on existing law
- An attempted revolution fails and the existing basic norm is unchanged
- The revolution succeeds and a new basic norm is established
- The revolutionary struggle is in progress and there is uncertainty about the basic norm
- 1. Existing non-political law
- 2. Non-political law enacted by the rebel regime
- 3. Political law enacted by the rebel regime
- The old legal order is restored after the initial success of the revolution
- International law
- Logical unity of national and international law: Kelsen’s monist view
- Does unity result from the primacy of international law?
- Does unity result from the primacy of national law?
- An evaluation of the pure theory of law
- Purity of Kelsen’s theory
- Given that the content of Norm L is identical to the content of Norm M, is there a special moral duty to observe Norm L?
- Is there a general moral duty to obey a valid legal norm?
- Separation of law from fact
- Explanatory limitation of the pure theory
- Alternative concepts of legal systems
- Recommended further reading
- 5 Realism in legal theory
- Legal formalism and legal positivism
- American realism
- A few general comments
- Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr and the birth of American realism
- The evolutionary character of law
- Judicial role in legal evolution
- Judicial legislation and the certainty of the law
- Law as prophecy: the trouble with the ‘bad man’ point of view
- Karl Llewellyn and the Grand Style
- Rules and discretion
- Law and morality
- Distrust of rules as descriptions of what courts do
- Law reform
- The Grand Style
- Fact sceptics
- Effects of prejudice
- Dissolution of the rule–fact distinction
- The legacy of American legal realism
- Scandinavian realism
- Hägerström and the mystical force of law
- Inadequacy of Hägerström’s theory
- Hägerström’s follower: Karl Olivecrona
- The binding force of law
- The content of a rule of law
- Force and the effectiveness of law
- Morality and law
- Alf Ross’ revision of Scandinavian realism
- Norms
- Legal rules
- Assessment of Scandinavian realism
- Recommended further reading
- Part 2 Law and morality
- 6 Natural law tradition from antiquity to the Enlightenment
- Law of nature, natural right and natural law
- Law of nature
- Natural rights
- Natural law
- Two great questions in natural law theory
- Discovering natural law
- The effect of natural law on rulers and subjects
- Fusion of law and morals in early societies
- Natural law thinking in Greek philosophy
- Teleology
- Deciding what is natural: the Sophist challenge
- Role of wisdom
- Plato’s natural law
- Plato’s essentialism
- Plato’s just state
- Aristotle’s intellectual virtues
- Reception of natural law in Rome
- Christian natural law
- Saint Augustine of Hippo
- Saint Thomas Aquinas
- Eternal law
- Natural law
- Divine law
- Human law
- The effect of unjust human laws
- Theological beginnings of a secular natural law
- The Conciliar Movement
- The School of Salamanca
- Francisco de Vitoria and universal human rights
- Natural law and economics
- The rise of secular natural law: natural rights and social contract
- Enlightenment, empiricism and natural rights
- Hugo Grotius
- Thomas Hobbes
- Samuel von Pufendorf
- John Locke
- Natural rights in Kant’s moral philosophy
- Natural rights and common law rights
- Legacy of the natural rights theorists
- Recommended further reading
- 7 John Finnis’ restatement of classical natural law
- Finnis’ defence of classical natural law
- Basic values
- Self-evidence
- Marriage as a basic good
- Deriving moral rules from basic values: the requirement of common good
- Deriving moral rules from basic values: practical reasonableness
- Practical reasonableness and consequentialism
- What is law?
- Duty to obey the law
- 1. Empirical liability to sanction in the event of disobedience
- 2. Legal obligation in the intra-systemic sense
- 3. Legal obligation in the moral sense
- 4. Moral obligation deriving not from legality but from a collateral source
- A return to divine natural law?
- MacIntyre’s plea for the revival of teleology
- God in Finnis’ theory
- The enduring legacy of natural law theory
- Recommended further reading
- 8 Separation of law and morality
- Lon Fuller on the morality of law
- Historical roots of Fuller’s theory: the closing period of the Nazi regime in Germany
- The Radbruch doctrine
- Hart’s criticism
- Fuller’s response: the morality that makes law possible
- Moral basis of law: external and internal moralities of law
- Law is a purposive, reciprocal and ongoing enterprise
- Internal morality of law
- The internal morality of law is morality of duty and of aspiration
- Hart’s rejoinder
- Fuller’s counter
- The connection of internal and external moralities
- Ronald Dworkin and the integrity of law
- Beginning of Dworkin’s legal philosophy: the rights thesis
- Principles and policy
- Dworkin’s concept of law
- Justification for the use of force
- Law as integrity
- Integrity and interpretation of statutes
- Pre-interpretive stage
- Interpretive stage
- Post-interpretive stage
- Law as a chain novel
- Law and morality in Dworkin
- Recommended further reading
- Part 3 Social dimensions of law
- 9 Sociological jurisprudence and sociology of law
- Sociology, sociology of law and sociological jurisprudence
- Sociology
- Positivist sociology
- Interpretive sociology
- Sociology of law
- Sociological jurisprudence
- Society and class struggle: the sociology of Karl Marx
- Hegel’s influence
- Historicism of Karl Marx
- Max Weber and the rationalisation of the law
- Spontaneous emergence of norms
- From irrational adjudication to judge-made law
- Emergence of legislation
- Arrival of lawyers
- Tension between formal rationalisation and substantive rationalisation
- Law and economics
- Law and social solidarity: Emile Durkheim’s legal sociology
- Division of labour as the cause of social solidarity
- Law in the sociological sense
- Mechanical and organic solidarity
- Mechanical solidarity
- Organic solidarity
- Anomic division of labour
- An evaluation of Durkheim’s sociology of law
- The living law: the legal sociology of Eugen Ehrlich
- Society as an association of associations
- Legal norm and legal proposition
- Legal norm and norm for decision
- State and state law
- Ehrlich’s contribution to the sociology of law
- Roscoe Pound and law as social engineering
- Task of the legal order
- What are interests?
- The principle or measure of valuing and adjusting competing interests
- Pound’s worth
- The achievements of the sociological tradition
- Recommended further reading
- 10 Radical jurisprudence
- Liberalism and liberal legal theory
- Kinds of liberalism
- Liberal legal theory
- 1. Law is a public good
- 2. The rule of law is necessary for liberty
- 3. The rule of law is possible
- Law must be knowable
- Facts must be ascertainable
- The making of law must be separated from the application of law
- 4. The political institutions of liberalism protect liberty and the rule of law
- Challenge of the critical legal studies (CLS) movement
- Fundamental contradiction
- Alienation by categorisation and reification
- Denial of the value neutrality of law
- Alternative legal world of CLS
- What CLS achieved
- Postmodernist challenge
- Roots of postmodernist philosophy
- The nature of the problem
- The challenge to liberal legality
- Deconstruction and the law
- The mystical foundation of Derrida’s theory
- Categorisation and survival
- Law and language game theory
- Foucault’s theory of power and domination
- Radical feminist jurisprudence
- Liberalism and women
- Liberal feminist jurisprudence
- Cultural feminism
- Radical feminism
- Postmodern feminism
- Challenges to liberal jurisprudence: concluding thoughts
- Recommended further reading
- 11 Economic analysis of law
- Background and basic concepts
- Cost, price, value, utility
- Methodological individualism
- Economic efficiency
- Wealth and wealth maximisation
- Transaction costs and the law
- The problem of initial entitlements
- Efficiency reasons
- Distributional reasons
- Other justice reasons
- Protection and regulation of entitlements
- Property rules and liability rules
- Inalienability rules
- Choosing between property rule and liability rule
- Efficiency of the common law hypothesis
- Judicial neutrality promotes efficiency
- Evolutionary explanation of common law efficiency
- Efficiency, wealth maximisation and justice: some criticisms of the Coasean analysis
- The problem of disequilibrium
- The moral dimension
- Public choice theory: the economics of legislation
- Kinds of law
- Logrolling
- Rent seeking
- Importance of economic analysis of law
- Recommended further reading
- 12 Evolutionary jurisprudence
- Introduction
- The need for an evolutionary jurisprudence
- Argument from design versus the principle of the accumulation of design
- The common law beginnings and the Darwinians before Darwin
- Mandeville’s Fable of the Bees
- Hume’s evolutionary view of society and law
- Adam Smith and original passions
- Ferguson’s theory of unconscious rule following
- Summary
- Eighteenth-century evolutionism compared with the German historical approach
- The Austrian school and spontaneous order
- Hayek’s restatement of evolutionary theory
- Kirzner and market evolution
- Scientific explanations
- Role of purposive action in legal evolution: the contribution of institutional theory
- JR Commons and artificial selection in legal evolution
- Evolution of organisations
- Evolution of commercial law
- Evolution of liability rules concerning tort and crime
- Pathways of legal evolution: the lessons from new institutionalism
- Normative implications
- Recommended further reading
- Part 4 Rights and justice
- 13 Fundamental legal conceptions
- Bentham and the classification of legal mandates
- Liberties and powers
- Liberty 1: Where liberty does not affect any other person
- Liberty 2 (power): Where liberty affects the rights of another
- Corroborated and uncorroborated liberties and powers
- 1. The law does not assist in the exercise of power
- 2. Law imposes a duty not to oppose the exercise of power
- 3. Law imposes a duty not to oppose and also a positive duty to assist
- Hohfeld’s analysis of jural relations: the exposition of fundamental legal conceptions
- Jural correlatives
- Jural opposites
- Jural contradictories
- The interconnectedness of the fundamental legal conceptions
- Each legal relation is a relation between two individuals concerning a single action or omission
- Right–duty correlation
- Liberty–no-right correlation
- Power–liability correlation
- The special meaning of liability
- Change of legal relations by natural causes and by the exercise of legal powers
- Do unlawful acts involve the exercise of Hohfeldian power?
- Kinds of powers
- Immunity–disability correlation
- Connecting the two ‘boxes’ in Hohfeld’s system
- Some logical puzzles in Hohfeld’s system
- Are there duties that do not correlate to rights?
- Liberties without rights
- Is liberty divisible?
- The value of Hohfeld’s system
- Recommended further reading
- 14 Justice
- Justice according to law and justice of the law
- Justice as virtue
- Platonic justice
- Aristotle’s theory of justice as virtue
- Universal and particular justice
- Distributive and rectificatory justice
- Political justice
- Aristotelian justice in contemporary democracy
- Legal justice
- Substantive legal justice
- Procedural legal justice
- Procedural due process
- Substantive due process
- Distributive justice as social justice
- Distributive justice and legal justice
- Distributive justice and equality
- Distributive justice and social security
- Justice as just desert
- Justice as fairness: Rawls’ theory of justice
- Why distribute at all?
- The new social contract: two principles of justice
- The meaning of the Second Principle
- Fair equality of opportunity
- The difference principle
- Priority of basic liberties
- Entitlement theory of justice: Nozick’s response to Rawls
- The night-watchman state
- Entitlement theory of justice
- Nozick’s criticism of Rawls’ theory of justice
- The principles that people settle on in the original position are not necessarily fair
- The problem of procedural principles in Rawls
- Immorality of taking natural assets into account
- Nozick and social security
- Evolutionary theory of justice
- Hume’s theory of justice
- Passion, experience and the moral sense
- Justice – the foundation of social order
- Coevolution of society and its rules of justice
- Fundamental rules of justice
- Adam Smith on justice
- Original passions and the role of sympathy
- The impartial spectator
- Emergence of the rules of justice
- The central implications of the evolutionary view of justice
- Recommended further reading
- References
- Index




