That law is coercive is widely assumed. The assumption has important consequences. What we regard as coercive we view as at least prima facie illegitimate, and we hold it to an accounting. What is not coercive, in contrast, is presumed to be in order. To be able to cast the law (or the free market) as a coercive force is to be able to throw upon its defenders a burden of persuasion which, even if carried, leaves what has had to be defended under a cloud. Where, as in morality and politics, so much is uncertain, to be able to cast a burden of persuasion upon one\u27s opponent is a significant rhetorical advantage. In recent decades, the concept of coercion has been subjected to rigorous analysis. This article applies that analytical work to ...
The value of liberty is one of our most fundamental commitments. Given this commitment, judgments co...
This paper addresses an important problem in modem legal philosophy: the problem of identifying the ...
This article examines the role of coercion in grounding a prima facie duty to obey the positive law....
This paper addresses the relationship between law and coercive force. It defends, against Frederick ...
This paper addresses the relationship between law and coercive force. It defends, against Frederick ...
The relationship between law and coercion has been, and still is, a central topic in legal philosoph...
Most legal and political philosophers agree that typical legal systems are coercive. But there is no...
Most legal and political philosophers agree that typical legal systems are coercive. But there is no...
This paper argues for a novel understanding of the relationship between law and coercion. It firstly...
This thesis is a study of the coerciveness of legal systems. I defend two main claims: that typical...
Claims about coercion play a significant role in some of the most important questions in political p...
In this work, the author attempts to answer two questions on the issue of coercion: first, what coer...
This paper considers the two claims Schauer introduces in The Force of Law. Firstly, the paper seeks...
Critics of international law argue that it is not really law because it lacks a supranational system...
In discussing whether legal systems are necessarily coercive, legal philosophers usually appeal to t...
The value of liberty is one of our most fundamental commitments. Given this commitment, judgments co...
This paper addresses an important problem in modem legal philosophy: the problem of identifying the ...
This article examines the role of coercion in grounding a prima facie duty to obey the positive law....
This paper addresses the relationship between law and coercive force. It defends, against Frederick ...
This paper addresses the relationship between law and coercive force. It defends, against Frederick ...
The relationship between law and coercion has been, and still is, a central topic in legal philosoph...
Most legal and political philosophers agree that typical legal systems are coercive. But there is no...
Most legal and political philosophers agree that typical legal systems are coercive. But there is no...
This paper argues for a novel understanding of the relationship between law and coercion. It firstly...
This thesis is a study of the coerciveness of legal systems. I defend two main claims: that typical...
Claims about coercion play a significant role in some of the most important questions in political p...
In this work, the author attempts to answer two questions on the issue of coercion: first, what coer...
This paper considers the two claims Schauer introduces in The Force of Law. Firstly, the paper seeks...
Critics of international law argue that it is not really law because it lacks a supranational system...
In discussing whether legal systems are necessarily coercive, legal philosophers usually appeal to t...
The value of liberty is one of our most fundamental commitments. Given this commitment, judgments co...
This paper addresses an important problem in modem legal philosophy: the problem of identifying the ...
This article examines the role of coercion in grounding a prima facie duty to obey the positive law....