Roy Sorensen has argued that vagueness in the law cannot be justified by appeal to the value of power-delegation, and thereby threatens to take away one of the main reasons for thinking that vagueness can be valuable to law. Delegation of power to officials is justified, he thinks, only if these officials are in a better position to discover whether a particular x is F, a condition not satisfied in cases of vagueness. I argue that Sorensen’s argument is unsound: delegation of power can be valuable even if the delegates are not in a better position to answer that question
Indeterminacy is an apparently unavoidable aspect of legal language and this paper aims to offer a t...
Vagueness and 'Vague': A Reply to Varzi page 1 Varzi (2003) has recently joined a thread ...
Sample chapter from H. Asgeirsson, The Nature and Value of Vagueness in the Law (Hart Publishing, 20...
When the United States Supreme Court used the expression “with all deliberate speed” in the case Bro...
Vagueness in the language of the law leads to indeterminacies in some (not in all) of the requiremen...
An established line of research demonstrates that vague judicial opinions are less likely to be impl...
"Lawmaking is - paradigmatically - a type of speech act: people make law by saying things. It is nat...
2012-04-06Lawmaking is - paradigmatically - a type of speech act: people make law by saying things. ...
For over a hundred years, the Supreme Court has struggled to articulate a coherent test for analyzin...
Vagueness and ambiguity are key problems in theories of legal interpretation. The article first deli...
It is natural to think that law ought not to be vague. After all, law is supposed to guide conduct, ...
This Article integrates two scholarly conversations to shed light on the divergent ways in which cou...
This chapter discusses some themes from Roy Sorensen's book Vagueness and Contradiction. While agree...
According to a view that founds wide support in philosophy of language and linguistics, the full lin...
Scott Soames has recently argued that the fact that lawmakers and other legal practitioners regard v...
Indeterminacy is an apparently unavoidable aspect of legal language and this paper aims to offer a t...
Vagueness and 'Vague': A Reply to Varzi page 1 Varzi (2003) has recently joined a thread ...
Sample chapter from H. Asgeirsson, The Nature and Value of Vagueness in the Law (Hart Publishing, 20...
When the United States Supreme Court used the expression “with all deliberate speed” in the case Bro...
Vagueness in the language of the law leads to indeterminacies in some (not in all) of the requiremen...
An established line of research demonstrates that vague judicial opinions are less likely to be impl...
"Lawmaking is - paradigmatically - a type of speech act: people make law by saying things. It is nat...
2012-04-06Lawmaking is - paradigmatically - a type of speech act: people make law by saying things. ...
For over a hundred years, the Supreme Court has struggled to articulate a coherent test for analyzin...
Vagueness and ambiguity are key problems in theories of legal interpretation. The article first deli...
It is natural to think that law ought not to be vague. After all, law is supposed to guide conduct, ...
This Article integrates two scholarly conversations to shed light on the divergent ways in which cou...
This chapter discusses some themes from Roy Sorensen's book Vagueness and Contradiction. While agree...
According to a view that founds wide support in philosophy of language and linguistics, the full lin...
Scott Soames has recently argued that the fact that lawmakers and other legal practitioners regard v...
Indeterminacy is an apparently unavoidable aspect of legal language and this paper aims to offer a t...
Vagueness and 'Vague': A Reply to Varzi page 1 Varzi (2003) has recently joined a thread ...
Sample chapter from H. Asgeirsson, The Nature and Value of Vagueness in the Law (Hart Publishing, 20...