Common law theory / edited by Douglas E. Edlin. electronic resource
Material type:
- 9780521846424 (hardback)
- 0521846420 (hardback)
- 340.5/701 22
- K588 .C668 2007
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | URL | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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KNCHR Library SharePoint | Non-Fiction | K588 .C668 2007 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Link to resource | Available |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Common law rules -- Judges as rule makers / Larry Alexander and Emily Sherwin -- Some types of law / John Gardner -- Common law reasoning -- The principles of legal reasoning in the common law / Melvin A. Eisenberg -- A similibus ad similia : analogical thinking in law / Gerald J. Postema -- Reasoned decisions and legal theory / David Dyzenhaus and Michael Taggart -- Common law constitutionalism -- Common law, natural law, and the constitution / James R. Stoner, Jr. -- Text, context, and constitution : the common law as public reason / T.R.S. Allan -- The myth of the common law constitution / Jeffrey Goldsworthy.
In this book, legal scholars, philosophers, historians, and political scientists from Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States analyze the common law through three of its classic themes: rules, reasoning, and constitutionalism. Their essays, specially commissioned for this volume, provide an opportunity for thinkers from different jurisdictions and disciplines to talk to each other and to their wider audience within and beyond the common law world. This book allows scholars and students to consider how these themes and concepts relate to one another. It will initiate and sustain a more inclusive and well-informed theoretical discussion of the common law's method, process, and structure. It will be valuable to lawyers, philosophers, political scientists, and historians interested in constitutional law, comparative law, judicial process, legal theory, law and society, legal history, separation of powers, democratic theory, political philosophy, the courts, and the relationship of the common law tradition to other legal systems of the world.
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