Most legal thinkers believe that legal rules and legal principles are meaningfully distinguished. Many jurists may have no very precise distinction in mind, and those who do might not all agree. But it is widely believed that legal norms come in different logical types, and that one difference is reasonably well captured by a nomenclature that distinguishes “rules” from “principles.” Larry Alexander is the foremost challenger to this bit of legal-theoretic orthodoxy. In several articles, but especially in “Against Legal Principles,” an influential article co-authored with Ken Kress two decades ago, Alexander has argued that legal principles cannot exist.In this essay, prepared as a contribution to a festschrift in Alexander’s honor, I a...
There isn’t much room for dissenters in public education today – whether they are respectful or not....
One of the purposes of the Trans‐Pacific Partnership (TPP) is to harmonize standards and create a un...
Fines, infringement, imprisonment; these words are resounding with librarians, faculty and students ...
LIBERTY & SECURITY, authored by Human Rights Law Professor Conor Gearty, is a book that is relevant ...
In recent years, it has become apparent that there is a difference between (a) discovering the seman...
Who has property in a found item X, which is contained in Y? The finder of X or the person who has p...
What would the criminal law look like if we took retributivist principles very seriously? In their b...
Stone consolidants have been extensively used for the preservation of historical structures since th...
Law 101: Everything You Need to Know About American Law, Third Edition. By Jay M. Feinman. New York:...
Purpose – The constructs of relativism and absolutism have a significant role to play in the d...
Objectives ‐ To identify and review the literature of reflective practice in library and information...
Are you keeping pace? In 2010, the number of law schools with Institutional Repositories (IRs) more ...
ECPA has functioned fairly well during its first 20 years in striking the right balance between law ...
The rapid realization of the “Internet of Everything” requires and causes that systems of social rul...
The American Law Institute’s twenty-first century mission to restate for the first time American emp...
There isn’t much room for dissenters in public education today – whether they are respectful or not....
One of the purposes of the Trans‐Pacific Partnership (TPP) is to harmonize standards and create a un...
Fines, infringement, imprisonment; these words are resounding with librarians, faculty and students ...
LIBERTY & SECURITY, authored by Human Rights Law Professor Conor Gearty, is a book that is relevant ...
In recent years, it has become apparent that there is a difference between (a) discovering the seman...
Who has property in a found item X, which is contained in Y? The finder of X or the person who has p...
What would the criminal law look like if we took retributivist principles very seriously? In their b...
Stone consolidants have been extensively used for the preservation of historical structures since th...
Law 101: Everything You Need to Know About American Law, Third Edition. By Jay M. Feinman. New York:...
Purpose – The constructs of relativism and absolutism have a significant role to play in the d...
Objectives ‐ To identify and review the literature of reflective practice in library and information...
Are you keeping pace? In 2010, the number of law schools with Institutional Repositories (IRs) more ...
ECPA has functioned fairly well during its first 20 years in striking the right balance between law ...
The rapid realization of the “Internet of Everything” requires and causes that systems of social rul...
The American Law Institute’s twenty-first century mission to restate for the first time American emp...
There isn’t much room for dissenters in public education today – whether they are respectful or not....
One of the purposes of the Trans‐Pacific Partnership (TPP) is to harmonize standards and create a un...
Fines, infringement, imprisonment; these words are resounding with librarians, faculty and students ...