Fifty years ago this year a legal practitioner turned military intelligencer turned philosopher, Herbert Hart, published The Concept of Law, still deservedly best-seller in thought about law. It presents law, especially common law and constitutionally ordered systems such as ours, as a social reality which results from the sharing of ideas and making of decisions that, for good or evil, establish rules of law which are what they are, whether just or unjust. But right at its centre is a chapter on justice, informed by Hart’s professional knowledge of Plato and Aristotle and the tradition of civilized thought about justice, thought which he sums up like this: “the general principle latent in [the] diverse applications of the idea of justice i...
There are two ways in which the social ideal of equality has found expression in the law: in the pri...
In this article, Professor John Kane tries to show that if inequality of treatment has to be morally...
Many theorists claim that justice is a question-begging concept that has no inherent substantive con...
Fifty years ago this year a legal practitioner turned military intelligencer turned philosopher, Her...
Fifty years ago this year a legal practitioner turned military intelligencer turned philosopher, Her...
Fifty years ago this year a legal practitioner turned military intelligencer turned philosopher, Her...
Fifty years ago this year a legal practitioner turned military intelligencer turned philosopher, Her...
This revised and annotated version of the H.L.A. Hart Memorial lecture in the University of Oxford i...
This thesis explores the concept of equality before the law, critiquing the claim that such a princi...
Hart\u2019s criticism of Devlin\u2019s stance on the legal enforcement of morality has been highly i...
Equality is a profound, multi-dimensional, and complex value. It may be regarded as an end in itself...
The problem of how best to resolve reverse discrimination questions under the equal protection cla...
A good theory of justice and law must allow for some form of social, economic, and political reform....
There are two ways in which the social ideal of equality has found expression in the law: in the pri...
There are two ways in which the social ideal of equality has found expression in the law: in the pri...
There are two ways in which the social ideal of equality has found expression in the law: in the pri...
In this article, Professor John Kane tries to show that if inequality of treatment has to be morally...
Many theorists claim that justice is a question-begging concept that has no inherent substantive con...
Fifty years ago this year a legal practitioner turned military intelligencer turned philosopher, Her...
Fifty years ago this year a legal practitioner turned military intelligencer turned philosopher, Her...
Fifty years ago this year a legal practitioner turned military intelligencer turned philosopher, Her...
Fifty years ago this year a legal practitioner turned military intelligencer turned philosopher, Her...
This revised and annotated version of the H.L.A. Hart Memorial lecture in the University of Oxford i...
This thesis explores the concept of equality before the law, critiquing the claim that such a princi...
Hart\u2019s criticism of Devlin\u2019s stance on the legal enforcement of morality has been highly i...
Equality is a profound, multi-dimensional, and complex value. It may be regarded as an end in itself...
The problem of how best to resolve reverse discrimination questions under the equal protection cla...
A good theory of justice and law must allow for some form of social, economic, and political reform....
There are two ways in which the social ideal of equality has found expression in the law: in the pri...
There are two ways in which the social ideal of equality has found expression in the law: in the pri...
There are two ways in which the social ideal of equality has found expression in the law: in the pri...
In this article, Professor John Kane tries to show that if inequality of treatment has to be morally...
Many theorists claim that justice is a question-begging concept that has no inherent substantive con...