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Items
Details
Author
Title
Law as institution / by Massimo La Torre.
Published
Dordrecht ; New York, N.Y. : Springer, [2010]
Copyright
©2010
Call Number
K230.L217 A363 2010
ISBN
9781402066061 (hardbound)
1402066066 (hardbound)
9781402066078 (e-book)
1402066074 (e-book)
1402066066 (hardbound)
9781402066078 (e-book)
1402066074 (e-book)
Description
xiv, 271 pages ; 25 cm.
System Control No.
(OCoLC)171556482
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Part I Law and Power
1.
Two Opposing Conceptions
3
1.1.
Preliminary
3
1.2.
The Law as Expression of Power. "Analytical Jurisprudence" and Legal Positivism
6
1.3.
The Supremacy of the Law. Natural Law, Constitutionalism, the Rule of Law
12
1.4.
Power as Expression of Law. Léon Michoud and Hugo Krabbe
18
2.
The Normativist View
25
2.1.
Preliminary
25
2.2.
Power Conceived of as Law: Hans Kelsen
26
2.3.
Law, Command, Norm
33
2.4.
Normative Order, Political Power, Dominion
42
2.5.
Autonomy, Heteronomy, Ideology
52
Part II Language, Norms, Institutions
3.
Meaning and Norm
61
3.1.
Preliminary
61
3.2.
Theories of Meaning
62
3.3.
Objections to the Verificationist Theory
63
3.4.
Objections to the Theory of "Representation" and to the Psychological Conception
65
3.5.
Objections to the Behaviourist Theory
70
3.6.
Theories of Norms and Theories of Validity
74
3.7.
An "Institutionalist" Theory of Language
87
3.8.
The Concept of Law. A First Approximation
95
4.
Law as Institution
97
4.1.
Preliminary
97
4.2.
Santi Romano's Theory of Law
98
4.3.
Old and New Institutionalism. Santi Romano Compared with Neil MacCormick and Ota Weinberger
109
4.4.
The Concept of "Institution". A Proposal
115
4.5.
Binding Force and Mandatoriness of Norms
125
4.6.
Institution and Intentionality. The Problem of the Social Identity
129
4.7.
The Particular Character of Legal Norms
132
5.
Law and Power
135
5.1.
Preliminary
135
5.2.
The Sociological Tradition. Two Models
136
5.3.
The Institutionalist Approach: From Hauriou to Weinberger
145
5.4.
Law as "Culture"
155
5.5.
Power and Rule
159
Part III Meaning and Values
6.
Meaning and Value Judgements
169
6.1.
Preliminary
169
6.2.
Theories of Meaning Once More
171
6.3.
'No Contrasting Views: Bertrand Russell and John L. Austin
181
6.4.
Meta-ethical Implications
188
7.
Value Judgements and Justification
193
7.1.
Preliminary
193
7.2.
Naturalism, Utilitarianism, Intuitionism
197
7.3.
Emotivism and Prescriptivism
206
7.4.
Universalizabilty of Moral Judgements. Linguistic Community and Discourse Theory
213
7.5.
Non-cognitivism and Critical Morality
218
7.6.
The Legal and the Moral Domains: Initial Conclusions
223
Part IV Epilogue
8.
Law and Morality
231
8.1.
What is at Stake?
231
8.2.
Definitions and Distinctions
232
8.3.
The Concept of Law
236
8.4.
Connections Between Law and Morality
241
8.5.
Separation of Law and Morality
244
8.6.
"Definitional" and "Derivative" Formulations
252
8.7.
Epilogue
255
Name Index
261
Subject Index
265