Philosophy of Legal Change

Philosophy of Legal Change

Theoretical Perspectives and Practical Processes

Rupniewski, Michal; Chmielinski, Maciej

Taylor & Francis Ltd

07/2019

270

Dura

Inglês

9781138586284

15 a 20 dias

453

Descrição não disponível.
Introduction: Legal Change and Political Philosophy (Maciej Chmielinski); Part I. General Theories; Chapter 1. Standards of Law-making as the Parts of Normative Space in the Post-modern Democratic States: The Question of Justification and Legitimacy of Law (Tadeusz Biernat); Chapter 2. Public Reason, Background Culture, and the Justification of Legal Change (Michal Rupniewski); Chapter 3. The Moral, the Political, and the Legal - Changing Patterns of Justification in a World of Legal Pluralization (Eva Weiler); Chapter 4. Human Rights: Desiderata of a Theory of Change (Stephen Riley); Part II. Paradigmatic Political Philosophies of Legal Change; Chapter 5. Legal "Determinism" or/and Legal "Creationism"? Conservative-communitarian versus Contractarian Approaches to Legal Change (Maciej Chmielinski); Chapter 6. Natural Law Ethics and the Issue of Legal Change (Michal Rupniewski); Chapter 7. Natural Law against Natural Rights in the Thought of Alasdair MacIntyre (Kamil Aksiuto); Chapter 8. Kant's Conception of Legal Change (Eduardo Charpenel); Chapter 9. Economism, Voluntarism, and Materialist Historicism: Three Faces of the Marxist Instrumental Approach to Legal Change. (Maciej Chmielinski); III. Practical Processes; Chapter 10. Petrifying, Disregarding or Reforming Customs: Can Customary Law be Changed in a Liberal Way? (Marc Goetzmann); Chapter 11. The "Codification Moment": An Attempt to Define Factors of Effective Law Reform Illustrated with the Example of the Swiss Civil Code of 10 December 1907 (Maria Lewandowicz); Chapter 12. Exogenous Institutional Change as Coercion and The Ideological Neutrality Litmus: the Case of Polish Communism (J. Patrick Higgins); Chapter 13. The Coercive Control Offence: A Case Study on Overcriminalisation (Melissa Hamilton); Chapter 14. Individualism In Times of Crisis - Theorising a Shift away from Classic Liberal Attitudes to Human Rights post 9/11. (Ian Turner); Chapter 15. Is the Principle of Legal Certainty a Human Right? The Legitimacy of the Retroactive Application of Laws (Jan Tryzna); Conclusion: the Philosophy of Legal Change as a Research Method (Michal Rupniewski)
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Young Men;UK's Security Service;Schweizerischer Juristenverein;Eternal Law;Public Reason Liberalism;Contemporary Societies;Existential Change;Public Reason;Ultimate Human Good;Human Rights;Good Life;Legal Pluralism;Natural Law Ethics;Coercive Control;Public Political Forum;Open Justification;Publicity Principle;Critical Legal Theory;Comprehensive Doctrines;Marxist Jurisprudence;Customary Law;Retroactive Laws;Aristotelian Community;Legal Moralism;Human Rights Theory