The impact of H.L.A. Hart's $\textit{The Concept of Law}$ on modern legal thinking is undisputed. But does it reflect the reality of the way British institutions work? In $\textit{Concept}$, Hart argued, amongst other things, that one of two ‘minimum conditions necessary and sufficient for the existence of a legal system’ was that ‘its rules of recognition specifying the criteria of legal validity and its rules of change and adjudication must be effectively accepted as common public standards of official behaviour by its officials’. In this paper, we begin the process of testing that statement empirically. Specifically, we ask whether non-judicial UK officials have a uniform view of what the rules of recognition, change and adjudication are...
In this article the relationship between Parliament and courts is examined. The views of writers on ...
H.L.A. Hart says that The Concept of Law is focused on municipal or domestic law because that is the...
In this article, the authors will consider a very narrow yet spectacularly important aspect of the r...
In 1961, H. L. A. Hart published The Concept of Law, his most extensive and systematic essay in gene...
As every reader of THE CONCEPT OF LAW is aware, H.L.A. Hart severely criticized John Austin for fail...
In this essay we take up the question of the non-legal foundations of any legal system, and in parti...
In his book, The Concept of Law, H.L.A. Hart claims there are two conditions, necessary and sufficie...
The law presents itself as a body of meaning, open to discovery, interpretation, application, critic...
H.L.A. Hart is one of the most famous legal positivists. Nevertheless, the controversy that surround...
This address at the Hart Centenary Conference in Cambridge in July 2007 reflects on foundational ele...
This thesis is a fundamental re-appraisal of the critique of John Austin by H. L. A. Hart. Because H...
This thesis is a fundamental re-appraisal of the critique of John Austin by H. L. A. Hart. Because ...
At the beginning of The Concept of Law Hart suggests a mistaken assimilation between conduct that is...
This thesis examines whether HLA Hart’s theory of the nature of law has explanatory power for the So...
Law is plural. In all but the simplest situations multiple laws overlap—national laws, subnational l...
In this article the relationship between Parliament and courts is examined. The views of writers on ...
H.L.A. Hart says that The Concept of Law is focused on municipal or domestic law because that is the...
In this article, the authors will consider a very narrow yet spectacularly important aspect of the r...
In 1961, H. L. A. Hart published The Concept of Law, his most extensive and systematic essay in gene...
As every reader of THE CONCEPT OF LAW is aware, H.L.A. Hart severely criticized John Austin for fail...
In this essay we take up the question of the non-legal foundations of any legal system, and in parti...
In his book, The Concept of Law, H.L.A. Hart claims there are two conditions, necessary and sufficie...
The law presents itself as a body of meaning, open to discovery, interpretation, application, critic...
H.L.A. Hart is one of the most famous legal positivists. Nevertheless, the controversy that surround...
This address at the Hart Centenary Conference in Cambridge in July 2007 reflects on foundational ele...
This thesis is a fundamental re-appraisal of the critique of John Austin by H. L. A. Hart. Because H...
This thesis is a fundamental re-appraisal of the critique of John Austin by H. L. A. Hart. Because ...
At the beginning of The Concept of Law Hart suggests a mistaken assimilation between conduct that is...
This thesis examines whether HLA Hart’s theory of the nature of law has explanatory power for the So...
Law is plural. In all but the simplest situations multiple laws overlap—national laws, subnational l...
In this article the relationship between Parliament and courts is examined. The views of writers on ...
H.L.A. Hart says that The Concept of Law is focused on municipal or domestic law because that is the...
In this article, the authors will consider a very narrow yet spectacularly important aspect of the r...