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Bentham and the Common Law Tradition

«A magnificent achievement, and one of the best books ever written on legal theory. Postema brilliantly explores the conflict between the common law and Benthamite utilitarianism, with enduring lessons for both theory and practice.»

Cass R. Sunstein, Robert Walmsley University Professor, Harvard University

This work explores the relationship between Bentham's utilitarian practical philosophy and his positivist jurisprudence. These theories appear to be in tension because his utilitarian commitment to the sovereignty of utility as a practical decision principle seems inconsistent with his positivist insistence on the sovereignty of the will of the lawmaker. Les mer

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This work explores the relationship between Bentham's utilitarian practical philosophy and his positivist jurisprudence. These theories appear to be in tension because his utilitarian commitment to the sovereignty of utility as a practical decision principle seems inconsistent with his positivist insistence on the sovereignty of the will of the lawmaker.

Two themes emerge from the attempt in this work to reconcile these two core elements of Bentham's practical thought. First, Bentham's conception of law does not fit the conventional model of legal positivism. Bentham was not just a utilitarian and a positivist; he was a positivist by virtue of his commitment to a utilitarian understanding of the fundamental task of law. Moreover, his emphasis on the necessary publicity and the systemic character of law, led him to insist on an essential role
for utilitarian reasons in the regular public functioning of law. Second, Bentham's radical critique of common law theory and practice convinced him of the necessity to reconcile the need for certainty of law with an equally great need for its flexibility. He eventually developed a constitutional
framework for adjudication in the shadow of codified law that accorded to judges discretion to decide particular cases according to their best judgment of the balance of utilities, guaranteeing the accountability and appropriate motivation of judicial decision-making through institutional incentives.

The original text of this work, first published in 1986, remains largely unchanged, but an afterword reconsiders and revises some themes in response to criticism.

Detaljer

Forlag
Oxford University Press
Innbinding
Innbundet
Språk
Engelsk
ISBN
9780198793052
Utgave
2. utg.
Utgivelsesår
2019
Format
22 x 14 cm

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«A magnificent achievement, and one of the best books ever written on legal theory. Postema brilliantly explores the conflict between the common law and Benthamite utilitarianism, with enduring lessons for both theory and practice.»

Cass R. Sunstein, Robert Walmsley University Professor, Harvard University

«When Postema's book was published in 1989, it brought Jeremy Bentham's jurisprudence to life and it gave us new ways of understanding legal positivism. Thirty years later, its importance is undiminished. This is a fine thoughtful meditation on Bentham's legal theory and his critique of eighteenth-century common law.»

Jeremy Waldron, University Professor and Professor of Law, New York University

«Scholars have much to thank Professor Postema for, in mapping out so clearly the relationship between Bentham's thoughts on substantive law and procedure, and for placing it so firmly in the context of eighteenth century common law thought. It is rare to find a book which changes the way one thinks about great jurists: this is one such book.»

The Cambridge Law Journal

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