The Hart-Fuller debate in the twenty-first century /
This book presents the papers and comments on those papers delivered at a colloquium held at the Australian National University in December 2008 to celebrate 50 years since the publication in the Harvard Law Review of the famous and wide-ranging debate between H.L.A. Hart and Lon L. Fuller.
Saved in:
Corporate Author: | |
---|---|
Other Authors: | |
Format: | Electronic Conference Proceeding eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Oxford ; Portland, Or. :
Hart Pub.,
2010.
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | CONNECT |
Table of Contents:
- 1. Out of the witches' cauldron?
- 2. Human rights and the rule of law after conflict
- 3. The Hart-Fuller debate's silence on human rights
- 4. International criminal law and the inner morality of law
- 5. On visibility and secrecy in international criminal law
- 6. The Hart-Fuller debate, transitional societies and the rule of law
- 7. Legal pluralism and the contrast between Hart's jurisprudence and Fuller's
- 8. The politics of defining law
- 9. Law as a means
- 10. Comment on 'law as a means'
- 11. Two turns of the screw
- 12. The common discourse of Hart and Fuller
- 13. How norms become normative
- 14. Resentment, excuse and norms
- 15. Positivism and the separation of realists from their scepticism normative guidance, the rule of law and legal reasoning
- 16. Legal reasoning, the rule of law and legal theory.