This thesis is a fundamental re-appraisal of the critique of John Austin by H. L. A. Hart. Because Hart never adequately reconstructs the question that Austin was dealing with and because Hart fails to distinguish between description and definition, he fails to see the strength of Austin's theory. In the development of his own view Hart's basic concepts are used with a shifting and variable content and he reintroduces many of the confusions which Austin sought to clear away. Hart's position encourages those who would say that the judge's function is to be amoral, apolitical and to strictly apply the law, even though this is theoretically unsound and historically inexact. I look at cases dealing with matrimonial violence ...
As every reader of THE CONCEPT OF LAW is aware, H.L.A. Hart severely criticized John Austin for fail...
Two methodological claims in Hart's The Concept of Law have produced perplexity: that it is a book o...
This address at the Hart Centenary Conference in Cambridge in July 2007 reflects on foundational ele...
This thesis is a fundamental re-appraisal of the critique of John Austin by H. L. A. Hart. Because ...
In 1961, H. L. A. Hart published The Concept of Law, his most extensive and systematic essay in gene...
In chapter one we consider H.L.A Hart\u27s attempt to advance legal theory by providing an improved...
In his book, The Concept of Law, H.L.A. Hart claims there are two conditions, necessary and sufficie...
English legal positivism began with the clarity of Jeremy Bentham and John Austin, but their clarity...
H. L. A. Hart\u27s work has dominated much of current jurisprudential discussion. In a recent articl...
Ronald Dworkin has identified H.L.A. Hart with the view that law consists in rules.1 That attributio...
The law presents itself as a body of meaning, open to discovery, interpretation, application, critic...
This article analyses the problem of theoretical status of John Austin's jurisprudence. It is almost...
In this essay I argue that in some sense legal philosophy, at least as the term is now understood am...
H.L.A. Hart is one of the most famous legal positivists. Nevertheless, the controversy that surround...
Jurisprudence is most usefully conceived as a theory about law, not as a theory of law. The distinct...
As every reader of THE CONCEPT OF LAW is aware, H.L.A. Hart severely criticized John Austin for fail...
Two methodological claims in Hart's The Concept of Law have produced perplexity: that it is a book o...
This address at the Hart Centenary Conference in Cambridge in July 2007 reflects on foundational ele...
This thesis is a fundamental re-appraisal of the critique of John Austin by H. L. A. Hart. Because ...
In 1961, H. L. A. Hart published The Concept of Law, his most extensive and systematic essay in gene...
In chapter one we consider H.L.A Hart\u27s attempt to advance legal theory by providing an improved...
In his book, The Concept of Law, H.L.A. Hart claims there are two conditions, necessary and sufficie...
English legal positivism began with the clarity of Jeremy Bentham and John Austin, but their clarity...
H. L. A. Hart\u27s work has dominated much of current jurisprudential discussion. In a recent articl...
Ronald Dworkin has identified H.L.A. Hart with the view that law consists in rules.1 That attributio...
The law presents itself as a body of meaning, open to discovery, interpretation, application, critic...
This article analyses the problem of theoretical status of John Austin's jurisprudence. It is almost...
In this essay I argue that in some sense legal philosophy, at least as the term is now understood am...
H.L.A. Hart is one of the most famous legal positivists. Nevertheless, the controversy that surround...
Jurisprudence is most usefully conceived as a theory about law, not as a theory of law. The distinct...
As every reader of THE CONCEPT OF LAW is aware, H.L.A. Hart severely criticized John Austin for fail...
Two methodological claims in Hart's The Concept of Law have produced perplexity: that it is a book o...
This address at the Hart Centenary Conference in Cambridge in July 2007 reflects on foundational ele...