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This volume collects six original essays by internationally respected researchers who have devoted themselves to the study of legal obligation. It brings together works that innovatively address key dimensions of the current debates concerning legal obligation from different and, in some cases, even opposing theoretical perspectives. As a result, the collection offers a comprehensive discussion of legal obligation that promises to significantly advance our understanding of the obligatory dimension of law. What specifically connects the contributions gathered here is one common thread: coming to terms with a notion legal obligation that is of both practical and theoretical importance. On the one hand, it is widely regarded as a fundamental legal concept by legal practitioners and laypeople alike, as not only judges, prosecutors, lawyers, and juries but also ordinary citizens make extensive use of obligation-related terms and discourses. On the other hand, the notion of legal obligation is of paramount significance for the theory of law. Indeed, even legal theorists who, quite understandably, refuse to reduce the law to a mere obligation-imposing device and opt instead for a view in which the normative dimension of the law also encompasses powers, rights, permissions, privileges and immunities, duly acknowledge the centrality of legal obligation for the understanding and conceptualisation of law. Hence the importance of the treatments presented in this volume.
Offers original approaches to the concept of legal obligation Presents innovative studies on the normative dimension of law Addresses in depth the obligatory force of law
Auteur
Deryck Beyleveld, BSc. Hons (Rand), MA (Cantab), PhD (UEA), FSB, Professor of Law and Bioethics. His numerous publications span Criminology, Philosophy of the Social Sciences, Moral and Legal Philosophy, and many areas of law. He has a special interest in the moral philosophies of Alan Gewirth and Kant and their applications to many areas of law. From 2008-2017, he also held a part-time Chair in Moral Philosophy and Applied Ethics at the University of Utrecht.
Stefano Bertea, is an Associate Professor of law. In his academic career, he has been a Marie Sklodowska-Curie research fellow at the University of Edinburgh and at the University of Frankfurt, a DFG research fellow at the University of Frankfurt am Main, and an Alexander von Humboldt research fellow at the University of Kiel. The output of his research work has been published in the form of several monographs, edited volumes, articles in prestigious specialist journals, and book chapters.
Contenu
Introduction.- Part 1: What a Legal Obligation is.- Toward a Minimal Conception of Legal Obligation.- What is a Legal Obligation?.- Part 2: Theoretical Perspectives on Legal Obligation.- Why Any Legal Positivist Idea of Legal Obligation is Untenable: A Kantian-Gewirthian Synthesis.- Gustav Radbruch's Theory of Legal Obligation.- Part 3: Forms of Legal Obligation.- Is There a Legal Duty not to Harm in Tort Law?.- Reflections on the Justifiability of Authority: Raz vs. Wolff.
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