The following links lead to the full text from the respective local libraries:
Alternatively, you can try to access the desired document yourself via your local library catalog.
If you have access problems, please contact us.
17 results
Sort by:
Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- 1. What Is Law (and Why Should We Care)? -- 2. Crazy Little Thing Called "Law" -- 3. Austin's Sanction Theory -- 4. Hart and the Rule of Recognition -- 5. How to Do Things with Plans -- 6. The Making of a Legal System -- 7. What Law Is -- 8. Legal Reasoning and Judicial Decision Making -- 9. Hard Cases -- 10. Theoretical Disagreements -- 11. Dworkin and Distrust -- 12. The Economy of Trust -- 13. The Interpretation of Plans -- 14. The Value of Legality -- Notes -- Acknowledgments -- Index
In: Yale Law School, Public Law Research Paper No. 600
SSRN
Working paper
SSRN
In: The Rule of Recognition and the U.S. Constitution, p. 235-268
"The Internationalists tells the story of the Peace Pact by placing it in the long history of international law from the seventeenth century through the present, tracing this rich history through a fascinating and diverse array of lawyers, politicians and intellectuals--Hugo Grotius, Nishi Amane, Salmon Levinson, James Shotwell, Sumner Welles, Carl Schmitt, Hersch Lauterpacht, and Sayyid Qutb. It tells of a centuries-long struggle of ideas over the role of war in a just world order. It details the brutal world of conflict the Peace Pact helped extinguish, and the subsequent era where tariffs and sanctions take the place of tanks and gunships."--Amazon
In: International affairs, Volume 95, Issue 1, p. 45-62
ISSN: 0020-5850
World Affairs Online
In: University of Chicago Law Review, Forthcoming
SSRN
Working paper
In: International affairs, Volume 95, Issue 1, p. 45-62
ISSN: 1468-2346
In: Global constitutionalism: human rights, democracy and the rule of law, Volume 7, Issue 3, p. 374-382
ISSN: 2045-3825
In: Ethics, Volume 127, Issue 4
SSRN
In: Yale Law Journal, Volume 121, Issue 2, p. 252
SSRN
In: Oxford scholarship online
This text collects together new essays by moral and legal philosophers that are aimed at knocking down a disciplinary wall that divides contemporary philosophical thinking about the nature of morality and contemporary philosophical thinking about the nature of law.