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Köp båda 2 för 1732 krThis original collection of jurisprudential essays furthers our understanding of the nature of rights. In Part 1, Halpin considers the value of Hohfeldian neutrality when theorising about law in general, and legal rights in particular, and Kurki f...
This collection of essays, written by leading commentators from across the common law world, examines a range of topics concerning equity and trusts in the commercial context. The essays investigate the way in which doctrines derived from the equi...
Mark McBride is Assistant Professor and James Penner is Professor, both at the National University of Singapore.
Introduction Mark McBride (National University of Singapore) and James Penner (National University of Singapore) PART I GENERAL JURISPRUDENCE AND LEGAL REASONING 1. On the Relationship between Law and Legal Reasoning Fred Schauer (University of Virginia, USA) 2. The Law of the Street Barbara Baum Levenbook (North Carolina State University, USA) 3. Must Legal Reasons Be General? Fbio Perin Shecaira (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) 4. The Factor Model and General Jurisprudence Adam Rigoni (Arizona State University, USA) PART II RULES AND REASONS 5. No Reasons Mark McBride (National University of Singapore) 6. Revisiting the Reasons Account of Precedent Grant Lamond (University of Oxford, UK) 7. Grant Lamonds Account of Precedent: A Personal Encounter John Horty (University of Maryland, USA) 8. How to Govern Conduct Larry Alexander (University of San Diego, USA) and Emily Sherwin (Cornell University, USA) 9. Working with a Body of Rules: On the Nature of Doctrinal Legal Disagreement in Judge-Made Law James Penner (National University of Singapore) PART III DOCTRINE AND PRACTICE 10. Thinking Like a Lawyer: An Introduction to Common Law Method Sundram Peter Soosay (Independent Scholar) 11. How the Ideal Adversary Systems Argumentative Structure Threatens Dignity Katharina Stevens (University of Lethbridge, Canada) and Nicole Lockstadt (McMaster University, Canada) 12. Lesser Evils, Mere Permissions and Justifying Reasons in Law Rob Mullins (University of Queensland, Australia) 13. First Among Equals: Abduction in Legal Argument from a Logocratic Point of View Scott Brewer (Harvard University, USA)