3,237 research outputs found

    Hart’s blind spot. The missing piece in The Concept of Law

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    Al inicio de El Concepto de Derecho, Hart sugiere una asimilación errónea entre conducta que es «no opcional» y conducta que es «obligatoria» (i. e. conducta que o es forzada o sometida a una obligación). Esta asimilación vicia el argumento del libro en su conjunto, llevándole a Hart a descuidar las diferentes vías en las que el derecho monitorea, corrobora o constituye relaciones de poder. Es cierto y evidente que en The Concept of Law la atención se dedica a los poderes normativos, legales. Sin embargo, el poder social bruto, y las relaciones del derecho con él —el papel del derecho como una pieza en la maquinaria de los poderes sociales— están ampliamente ignorados. Éste es, de alguna manera, el ángulo muerto de Hart. Enuncio algunas de las vías, aparte de la coerción u obligación, en las que el derecho puede servir, corroborar o ser un instrumento de poder social. También muestro que el tratamiento de Hart de las relaciones entre el derecho y el poder político, en The Concept of Law, es insatisfactorio. Tanto su reconstrucción de la surgimiento ideal de un sistema jurídico desarrollado y el argumento que sustenta «el contenido mínimo del derecho natural» presuponen la idea de un grupo social en el que no subsisten relaciones de poder.At the beginning of The Concept of Law Hart suggests a mistaken assimilation between conduct that is «non-optional» and conduct that is «obligatory» (i. e. conduct that is either coerced or subject to an obligation). This suggested assimilation vitiates the argument of the whole book, leading Hart to neglect the different ways in which the law typically tracks, corroborates or constitutes power relations. It is true that, famously, attention is paid, in The Concept of Law, to normative, legal powers. Brute social power, and law’s relation to it —the role of law as a cog in the workings of social powers—, however, are largely overlooked. This is, in a way, Hart’s blind spot. I list some of the ways, other from coercion or obligation, in which the law may happen to serve, corroborate or be an instrument of social power. I also show that Hart’s treatment of the relations between the law and political power, in The Concept of Law, is unsatisfactory. Both his reconstruction of the ideal genesis of a developed legal system and the argument supporting a «minimal content of natural law» presuppose the idea of a social group in which no power relationships subsist

    Liberal Multiculturalism, neutrality and the Rule of Law

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    Most contemporary liberal theories of justice agree that principles of justice should be neutral between citizens’ conceptions of the good life. In this essay, I assume that the liberal doctrine of state neutrality can somehow be defended against its critics. y first aim is to show that a certain connection holds between liberal neutrality, suitably understood, on the one hand, and, on the other hand, the Rule of Law. By the ‘Rule of Law’ I mean, as has now become usual among legal theorists, a set of formal and institutional features the law may possess in varying degrees. These features define an ideal, which laws have traditionally been expected to live up to. It is, under many respects, a modest ideal. Specifically, the Rule of Law, by itself, does not guarantee liberal neutrality. But, I argue, there is something neutral about it. More precisely. a specific version of the Rule of Law --I call this ‘Enlightenment Rule of Law’--illuminatingly instantiates part of what is involved in the idea of liberal neutrality. Il show, secondly, that the Rule of Law is part and parcel of what is involved in liberal multiculturalism. I use the label ‘liberal multiculturalism’ in the sense developed by W. Kymlicka. So understood, it designates a loose set of policies, and the principles supporting them, designed to acknowledge and accomodate ethnocultural minorities, and to secure to individuals the good of cultural membership. Laws that fully meet the requirements of the Rule of Law may certainly run counter human rights. Conformity to the Rule of Law, however, is a necessary condition for respecting human rights. Respect for human rights, in turn, is required byliberal multiculturalism. Thus, respect for the Rule of LawL is a necessary condition of liberal ulticulturalism. And, if the Rule of Law expresses part of what is involved in the ideal of liberal neutrality, so too liberal multiculturalism may be understood accordingly

    Law, Plans and Practical Rartionality

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    There is, according to many contemporary jurisprudential theories, a tight relationship between law and practical rationality: the law gives us, or at least it purports to give us, reasons for action. In his book, Legality (2011), Scott J. Shapiro puts forward what at first glance appears to be a new view in this vein. Shapiro calls it the “Planning Theory” of law; it provides an account of what the law is in terms of a particular kind of reasons: plans (a notion moulded, in his work in the philosophy of action, by Michael E. Bratman). In this paper, I provide a reconstruction of the Planning Theory as a view of the relationships between law and practical rationality, and I point to some fundamental issues which, when considered in this light, the theory leaves open, or which seem to raise trouble for it

    Hart's blind spot : Il tassello mancante in "The concept of law"

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    Título del seminario: "50º aniversario de The Concept of Law"In apertura di The Concept of Law (d’ora in avanti, CL) Hart osserva: "the most prominent general feature of law at all times and places is that its existence means that certain kinds of human conduct are no longer optional, but in some sense obligatory" (1961, p. 6; cfr. anche p. 80: "where there is law, there human conduct is made in some sense non-optional or obligatory"). Questa osservazione appare innocua. Ma c’è un trucco. L’osservazione suggerisce un’identificazione: l’identificazione fra l’essere una linea di condotta ‘non-opzionale’ e il suo essere ‘obbligatoria’. E questa identificazione è fallace..

    Publicity and the Rule of Law

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    By the ‘Rule of Law’ I mean a set of formal and institutional features the law may possess in varying degrees. These features define an ideal, which laws have traditionally been expected to live up to. One of these features is publicity. Part of what constitutes the Rule of Law is the requirement that the laws should be public. This is the subject of this paper. When it is claimed that the Rule of Law requires that the laws should be public, what is to be understood by this claim? My main claim is that the Rule of Law requirement of publicity is best understood in terms of the notion of common, or mutual, knowledge. When it is required that the laws should be public, what should be meant by this is not only that each one of the law’s addressees should know what the law is, but also that everybody should know that everybody knows what the law is, that everybody should know that everybody knows that everybody knows what the law is, and so on. This may look unnecessarily complicated. I’ll try to show that this is a false impression, and that understanding the publicity requirement along these lines illuminates various aspects of the normative ideal the publicity requirement may be taken to embody

    Pre-convenzioni: un frammento dello Sfondo

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    In this paper I argue that there exist conventions of a peculiar sort, which are neither norms nor regularities of behaviour, partaking of both. I proceed as follows. After a sketchy analysis of the meaning of ‘convention’, I give some examples of the kind of phenomena I have in mind: bodily skills, know-how, taste and style, habitus (P. Bourdieu), «disciplines» (M. Foucault). Then I group some arguments supporting my claim: (i) considerations about the identity conditions of precedents (D. Lewis) and about the projectibility of predicates in inductive inference generally (N. Goodman); (ii) thoughts about rule-following (L. Wittgenstein); (iii) an examination of some of J. R. Searle’s ideas about the «Background» of intentionality. I conclude with some remarks about the time-honoured antithesis ‘nature’ v. ‘convention’

    Rivoluzione cognitivista e teoria del diritto: un programma di ricerca

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    Questo scritto ha un carattere esclusivamente programmatico. \uc8 dedicato alla presentazione delle linee essenziali di un programma di ricerca nel quale siamo impegnati gi\ue0 da un po\u2019 di tempo, e che intendiamo sviluppare nel prossimo futuro. Nei primi due paragrafi tratteggiamo sommariamente il contesto culturale e scientifico della \u201crivoluzione cognitivista\u201d, nel quale il nostro programma si colloca (behavioural law and economics; responsabilit\ue0 e imputabilit\ue0; euristiche e bias nella decisione giudiziale). Nel terzo paragrafo elenchiamo le linee di ricerca affini gi\ue0 battute da altri autori. Il quarto paragrafo \ue8 dedicato alla formulazione del nucleo centrale del nostro programma: quali sono i processi psicologici soggiacenti alla comprensione, osservanza, produzione, applicazione di regole in genere, e di regole giuridiche in particolare? Successivamente diremo cosa abbiamo gi\ue0 fatto (molto poco), e cosa intendiamo fare in futuro.What we present here are the outlines of a research program. In sections 1 and 2, we give a rough picture of the \u201ccognitive revolution\u201d, the context in which our program situates. In section 3, we briefly review some well-established lines of inquiry germane to ours (behavioural law and economics; criminal responsibility and imputability; heuristics and biases in adjudication). Section 4 is devoted to the core of our research program: what are the psychological processes involved in the understanding, issuing and complying with norms, and in rule-based decision-making? Subsequently, in the last two sections, we give a glimpse on what we have done already (not much), and on what we plan to do in the next future
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