Fr. 202.40

Decline of Private Law - A Philosophical History of Liberal Legalism

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Gonçalo de Almeida Ribeiro is Professor of Law at Universidade Católica Portuguesa and Judge of the Constitutional Court of Portugal. Klappentext Based on author's thesis (S.J.D.: Harvard Law School, 2012). Vorwort A landmark work of jurisprudence, private law theory and history, tracing the decline of liberal private law and the triumph of constitutionalism in Western civilisation, and the death of reason in the face of plurality. Zusammenfassung This book is a large-scale historical reconstruction of liberal legalism, from its inception in the mid-nineteenth century, the moment in which the jurists forged the alliance between political liberalism and legal expertise embodied in classical private law doctrine, to the contemporary anxiety about the possibility of both a liberal solution to the problem of political justification and of law as a respectable form of expert knowledge. Each stage in the history is a moment of synthesis between a substantive and a methodological idea. The former is the liberal political theory of the period, purporting to provide a solution to the problem of political justification. The latter is a conception of legal method or science, supposedly vindicating the access of the expert to the political choices embodied in the law. Thus, each moment in the history of liberal legalism integrates a political theory with a jurisprudential conception. Although it reaches the unsettling conclusion that liberal legalism has largely failed by its own standards, the book urges us to avoid quietism, scepticism or cynicism, in the hope that a deeper understanding of the fragility of our values and institutions inspires a more thoughtful, broadminded and nurtured citizenship. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. The Idea of Political Liberalism I. The Liberal Hypothesis II. Majoritarian Government III. Democratic Legitimacy IV. The Trouble with Majoritarianism V. Reasonable Pluralism VI. Freestanding Principles VII. Politics and Justice VIII. Political Liberalism IX. Pluralism within Liberalism 2. Kant and the Will Theory I. Why Kant? II. Kant’s Moral System III. Moral Value in the Groundwork IV. The Nature of Recht V. The Rightful Condition VI. Private Right VII. The Will Theory VIII. Norm and Exception 3. The Rise of Classical Private Law I. From Theory to Ideology II. Reception of the Will Theory III. Rise and Decline of Iurisprudentia IV. Modern Legal Science V. The Savignian System (i): Substance VI. The Savignian System (ii): Method VII. The Triumph of Formalism VIII. Classical Private Law 4. The Socialisation of Private Law I. The Social Question II. The Social Jurists III. The Emergence of Social Law IV. The Social in Private Law V. The Critique of Formalism VI. Teleological Jurisprudence VII. Culpa in Contrahendo VIII. Abuse of Rights 5. The Politicisation of Private Law I. On ‘Legal Realism’II. The Collapse of Private/Public III. Confl icting Considerations IV. Rules and PrinciplesV. The Indeterminacy of Doctrine VI. The Indeterminacy of Rules VII. The Indeterminacy of Grounds VIII. Ideology in Private Law...

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Authors Gonçalo de Almeida, Goncalo de Almeida Ribeiro, Gonçalo de Almeida Ribeiro, Gonzalo Almeida Ribeiro, Professor Goncalo De Almeida Ribeiro
Publisher Bloomsbury
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 31.05.2019
 
EAN 9781509907908
ISBN 978-1-5099-0790-8
No. of pages 344
Series Law and Practical Reason
Law and Practical Reason
Subject Social sciences, law, business > Law > International law, foreign law

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