Allan Beever argues in his new book that there are two distinct forms of justice — commutative and distributive — and that we have forgotten about commutative justice, the form of justice that governs our interpersonal relationships. Consequently, we erroneously think of private law from the perspective of distributive justice, the form of justice that governs our relation to the state. Forgetting commutative justice, he claims, has been a serious philosophical mistake with potentially grave practical implications. Theoretically, says Beever, the modern view is wrong, because politics and distributive justice are grounded in our pre-political, interpersonal relationships. In other words, commutative justice is logically prior to distributiv...
This book presents a distinctive version of a contractarian approach to law and justice. The work ar...
The aim of this thesis is to uncover the philosophical foundations of the defendant's duty of restit...
I thought that because the Federalist Society is a society tied to law schools, someone should discu...
Allan Beever argues in his new book that there are two distinct forms of justice — commutative and d...
There are two, apparently conflicting, approaches to private law theorizing. One approach - by now, ...
The purpose of this thesis is to present a conception of commutative justice. Commutative justice is...
Private law recognizes claims between individuals. Legal economists have argued that claims by the s...
Despite being sympathetic to the aim of Martijn Hesselink’s paper to explore how private law might b...
The question of what justice has to do with the law of unjust enrichment (if it has anything to do w...
Justice is the highest of our moral ends. Implementing a conception of justice requires the coordina...
According to Aristotle, justice consists of giving each person his due: equal members of society sho...
In the evolution of private law, legal reasoning has always confronted the fundamental problem of re...
Constitutional rights and private law are on a collision course. Constitutional rights have many con...
In the evolution of private law, legal reasoning has always confronted the fundamental problem of re...
My paper considers the theoretical foundations of the claim that the private law of different legal ...
This book presents a distinctive version of a contractarian approach to law and justice. The work ar...
The aim of this thesis is to uncover the philosophical foundations of the defendant's duty of restit...
I thought that because the Federalist Society is a society tied to law schools, someone should discu...
Allan Beever argues in his new book that there are two distinct forms of justice — commutative and d...
There are two, apparently conflicting, approaches to private law theorizing. One approach - by now, ...
The purpose of this thesis is to present a conception of commutative justice. Commutative justice is...
Private law recognizes claims between individuals. Legal economists have argued that claims by the s...
Despite being sympathetic to the aim of Martijn Hesselink’s paper to explore how private law might b...
The question of what justice has to do with the law of unjust enrichment (if it has anything to do w...
Justice is the highest of our moral ends. Implementing a conception of justice requires the coordina...
According to Aristotle, justice consists of giving each person his due: equal members of society sho...
In the evolution of private law, legal reasoning has always confronted the fundamental problem of re...
Constitutional rights and private law are on a collision course. Constitutional rights have many con...
In the evolution of private law, legal reasoning has always confronted the fundamental problem of re...
My paper considers the theoretical foundations of the claim that the private law of different legal ...
This book presents a distinctive version of a contractarian approach to law and justice. The work ar...
The aim of this thesis is to uncover the philosophical foundations of the defendant's duty of restit...
I thought that because the Federalist Society is a society tied to law schools, someone should discu...