Facts and norms in law : interdisciplinary reflections on legal method
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Facts and norms in law : interdisciplinary reflections on legal method
Edward Elgar, c2016
- : cased
Available at / 5 libraries
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes bibliographic references and index
Contents of Works
- Introduction : facts, norms and interdisciplinary research / Wouter de Been, Sanne Taekema and Bart van Klink
- Facts, values and norms / Jaap Hage
- Imitation of life : resonances between law and fact and fact and law / Geoffrey Samuel
- The epistemic dependence of judicial decision-makers / Rachel Herdy
- Facts and norms in the behavioural assumptions of law / Peter Cserne
- Legal doctrine is a non-normative discipline : an argument from abstract object theory / Anne Ruth Mackor
- Systems theory, critique and law : to kill some darlings? / Lyana Francot
- A law and economics perspective on normative analysis / Alessio M. Pacces
- Exploring the boundaries of law: on the Is-ought distinction in Jellinek and Kelsen / Bart van Klink and Oliver W. Lembcke
- The natural and the normative : the distinction, not the dichotomy, between facts and values in a broader context / Maksymiliam Del Mar
- How should lawyers use sociological ideas? Juristic practice and social science / Roger Cotterrell
- The need for audacious, fully armed scholars : concluding reflections / Wibren van der Burg
Description and Table of Contents
Description
What role does empirical data play in law? How can we draw normative conclusions from empirical legal research? New insights in philosophy, the social sciences and the humanities have forced the relationship between facts and norms on to the agenda. This book presents an innovative set of perspectives on the relationship between descriptive and normative elements in legal inquiry and practice.
The contributors provide critical insights from a range of different disciplinary traditions and theoretical positions. They discuss topics such as the epistemic dependence of judicial decision-makers, legal doctrine as a non-normative discipline, systems-theory critique and law, and exploring the boundaries of law.
This book will benefit legal academics and graduate students looking to explore issues of methodology. It will also be of great interest to researchers in law and related topics interested in discussions of multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary research.
Contributors include: R. Cotterrell, P. Cserne, W. de Been, M. Del Mar, L. Francot, J. Hage, R. Herdy, O.W. Lembcke, A.R. Mackor, A.M. Pacces, G. Samuel, S. Taekema, B. van Klin, W. van der Burg
Table of Contents
Contents:
Foreword
PART I
1. Introduction
Wouter de Been, Sanne Taekema and Bart van Klink
2. Facts, Values and Norms
Jaap Hage
PART II
3. Imitation of Life: Resonances Between Law and Fact and Fact and Law
Geoffrey Samuel
4. The Epistemic Dependence of Judicial Decision-Makers
Rachel Herdy
5. Facts and Norms in the Behavioural Assumptions of Law
Peter Cserne
PART III
6. Legal Doctrine is a Non-normative Discipline: An Argument from Abstract Object Theory
Anne Ruth Mackor
7. Systems Theory, Critique and Law: To Kill Some Darlings?
Lyana Francot
8. A Law and Economics Perspective on Normative Analysis
Alessio M. Pacces
PART IV
9. Exploring the Boundaries of Law: On the Is-Ought Distinction in Jellinek and Kelsen
Bart van Klink and Oliver W. Lembcke
10. The Natural and the Normative: The Distinction, not the Dichotomy, between Facts and Values in a Broader Context
Maksymilian Del Mar
11. How Should Lawyers Use Sociological Ideas? Juristic Practice and Social Science
Roger Cotterrell
PART V
12. The Need for Audacious Fully Armed Scholars: Concluding Reflections
Wibren van der Burg
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"