By explaining the legal holes debate via the lens of science and theology, the essay offers two main insights. First, the essay argues that although the legal holes debate is often understood as simply being about executive measures in emergencies, the debate should also be seen as implicating a broader jurisprudential dispute about the very nature of the legal system. Second, the essay shows that the two approaches bear several surprising similarities--their skepticism of judges, their skepticism of legislators, and, most notably, their use of law-preserving violence
My Essay is a response to legal realism, to its well-known arguments against rules of law. Legal r...
Broadly skeptical or relativistic criticisms of law and legal discourse, of the kind prevalent in th...
The essay is to be published in two parts. Part A, The Killing Fields .. . , is a criticai inquiry...
(Excerpt) In the years that followed the events of September 11, 2001, a debate crystallized between...
The article has two aims: first to explain, andif possible escape, confusion about what law is and w...
I argue in this essay that the popular “descriptive” approach to jurisprudence can be modeled after ...
Legal positivism is an incoherent intellectual enterprise. It sets itself an explanatory task which ...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier. Law schools, in effect, have been located on one-way str...
After considering the side road of critical legal studies, I shall try to indicate the major signpos...
Articles limning the law pertaining to judicial notice are legion, and the footnotes which have been...
Published as Chapter 18 in Searching for Contemporary Legal Thought, Justin Desautels-Stein & Christ...
Redundancy has a bad reputation among legal intellectuals. My interest in the virtues of redundancy ...
Many of the current debates in jurisprudence focus on articulating the boundaries of law. In this es...
Not long ago, any question of the kind How may theology serve as a resource in understanding law? ...
This brief essay describes what critical legal scholars said – or perhaps more accurately – would ha...
My Essay is a response to legal realism, to its well-known arguments against rules of law. Legal r...
Broadly skeptical or relativistic criticisms of law and legal discourse, of the kind prevalent in th...
The essay is to be published in two parts. Part A, The Killing Fields .. . , is a criticai inquiry...
(Excerpt) In the years that followed the events of September 11, 2001, a debate crystallized between...
The article has two aims: first to explain, andif possible escape, confusion about what law is and w...
I argue in this essay that the popular “descriptive” approach to jurisprudence can be modeled after ...
Legal positivism is an incoherent intellectual enterprise. It sets itself an explanatory task which ...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier. Law schools, in effect, have been located on one-way str...
After considering the side road of critical legal studies, I shall try to indicate the major signpos...
Articles limning the law pertaining to judicial notice are legion, and the footnotes which have been...
Published as Chapter 18 in Searching for Contemporary Legal Thought, Justin Desautels-Stein & Christ...
Redundancy has a bad reputation among legal intellectuals. My interest in the virtues of redundancy ...
Many of the current debates in jurisprudence focus on articulating the boundaries of law. In this es...
Not long ago, any question of the kind How may theology serve as a resource in understanding law? ...
This brief essay describes what critical legal scholars said – or perhaps more accurately – would ha...
My Essay is a response to legal realism, to its well-known arguments against rules of law. Legal r...
Broadly skeptical or relativistic criticisms of law and legal discourse, of the kind prevalent in th...
The essay is to be published in two parts. Part A, The Killing Fields .. . , is a criticai inquiry...