The law between objectivity and power.
- First edition.
- 1 online resource
Part 1: Introduction --1 Ways of Thinking about Objectivity (Philip M. Bender) --Part 2: Objectivity and Legal Interpretation --2 Subjectivism, Objectivism, and Intuitionism in Legal Reasoning: Avoiding the Pseudos (Hans Christoph Grigoleit) --3 Historical Arguments, Dynamic Interpretation, and Objectivity: Reconciling Three Conflicting Concepts in Legal Reasoning (Franz Bauer) --Part 3: Objectivity and Constitutional Law --4 The Law between Objectivity and Power from the Perspective of Constitutional Adjudication (Peter M. Huber) --5 Conceptual and Jurisprudential Foundations of the Debate on Interpretive Methodology in Constitutional Law: An Argument for More Analytical Rigor (Daniel Wolff) --Part 4: Objectivity and Private Law --6 The Role for Remedial Discretion in Private Law Adjudication (Ben Köhler) --7 The Essential-Matters Doctrine (Wesentlichkeitsdoktrin) in Private Law: A Constitutional Limit to Judicial Development of the Law? (Victor Jouannaud) --8 Private International Law between Objectivity and Power (Andreas Engel) --Part 5: Objectivity and Criminal Law 9 Algorithmic Crime Control between Risk, Objectivity, and Power (Lucia Sommerer) --10 Innocence: A Presumption, a Principle, and a Status (Martín D. Haissiner) --Part 6: Objectivity and International Arbitration --11 Stateless Justice: The Evolutionary Character of International Arbitration (Fabio Núñez del Prado) --12 International Arbitration as a Project of World Order: Reimagining the Legal Foundations of International Arbitration (Santiago Oñate) --Part 7: Objectivity and Interdisciplinary Perspectives of Economics and Literature --13 Economic Analysis of Law: Inherent Component of the Legal System (Peter Zickgraf) --14 From the Furies to ‘Off with Their Heads’: The Complex Inter-Relation between Law and Power in the Legal-Literary Canon (Emilia Jocelyn-Holt) --Part 8: Structural Objectivity --15 Metaphors Lawyers Live by: Cognitive Linguistics and the Challenge for Pursuing Objectivity in Legal Reasoning (Jan-Erik Schirmer) --16 The Citizenship Duality (Alvin Padilla-Babilonia).
This book examines the tension between the law of objectivity and power. Is law an instrument of power or, on the contrary, is it able to limit power due to its objective character? The book uses an international and interdisciplinary approach to explore this question. It not only examines the central problem from a theoretical perspective, but also includes insights from practical, doctrinal contributions..
9781509962662
10.5040/9781509962662 doi
Adminstrative law. Constitutional law. Jurisprudence & philosophy of law