Jurisprudence Lecture 1 15th September
Course
Divided into 3 sections
1st: Law as a legal system
2nd Law and morality
3rd How law interacts with society and other outside influences
Different sections correspond to different traditions/views of jurisprudence. Can be seen
as antagonistic but also as different part of complimenting cohesiveness
What is jurisprudence?
As a subject
General
o Looks at general truths about law
Law is found in all different laws throughout different societies in
history. All are meant to serve or produce law, transcend the
limitations of space and time.
Legal norms
Standards of behaviour
o Do or do not
o You have the right to do something
o What is right and wrong to do according to the law
Rules and principles
o Rules are generally norms
o Principles are more general. Considered as existing
without a presence in a formal legal text/in the
thinking of a judge
Origins of law
Don’t use sources as it has positivist implications
What the judges say/officials or
What the judges say/officials as far as society agrees
Legal authority
Binding force of law
o Might say that law is binding only to the extent that
statutes make sense in regards to justice
Law might put someone in jail without any
real moral reasons
Similar to legal norms
Legal reasoning
Ways of arguing
Necessary to reach valid judicial decisions?
Legal practice
Ways to go to court
Multidimensional
o Descriptive
, Helps us to understand what law is here and now , there and then
without any valuation whether it is good/bad
What made it law
o Aspirational
Suggests we should mostly emphasise how well these legislative
laws/judicial decisions do in reflection on society
Law has a mission to bring about, what is the values?
o Explanatory
Brings together the two
Says that this is the law, make an evaluation but go beyond that
and find out the social conditions/pragmatic environment that
brought about that law.
Goes beyond making an evaluation
Definitional
o Law as” institutional” “normative” “order”
Neil maccormick
Not just institutional
o Not all humanely recognised and formalised practices
are law
o Family is an institution, starts without the
interference of law
o Law is also institution, formalised in its own way
The constitution gives different values and
also the courts
o Not all institutions are law
Not just normative
o Not all forms of binding action-guidance are law
Law guides our behaviour and shapes it
Some actions have sanctions that persuade
folk from performing an action.
However, personal moral values are
norms that persuade folk
Religious values are also norms
o Neither are laws
Not just order
o Not all systems of posited/customary rules are law
Posited
Put forward by legal officials. Eg judges
or elected officials in parliament
Customary
Comply with it simply because we
know it as practice
o Lots of social rules
But also within law as
well
Less developed
societies have this
o Law is all of these things together
Contested
practical
,The inquiry into the concept of law and how such an enquiry can be useful in practical
everyday life. Jurisprudence considers law as a being with its own existence
A contested and practical subject
each case of litigation/prosecution has an element of contestation. Both parties
say they are right and are supported by the law. This is how law is practiced,
through the resolution of contestation, both in the courts and the parliament
5 judge archetypes how they are different ways to resolve contested issues
o The positivist
The law is what it says in these texts and pronouncements we
recognise as the authoritative sources of law
o The formalist
The law is the answer you get when you follow the rules and
procedures to the letter
Follow the statutes but goes further and interpret them in
the strictest way possible. What does justice mean in this
structure of interpretation.
o The realist
The law is simply a vehicle for our preferred outcome in a case
Very cynical
Judge would have very wide range of decision, it would be
binding anyway. Judges have the ability to shape the law
through judicial decision making how they want y
o The idealist
If look hard enough, the law will reveal the right thing to do
Natural law theories. If look hard enough, the law will reveal
the right thing to do
o We know what is the right thing to do before
beginning the investigate into the law
o Indeterminate judge
Law can often give us no clear guidance no matter how hard we
look
Floats somewhere between them all.
Type of judge that will try to be flexbile and take everything
into account.
Jurisprudence Lecture 2 18th September
Law as a system of rules
Introduction to legal positivism
o Legal positivism is a theory of the law
Law as a legal order places this theory in contrast with other
theories on the law
Law as a system of rules
o A system, not just a set
o Of rules: not necessarily of rules and principles
Rules more concrete and generally enacted/adjudicated
Principles are more general in scope and not necessarily
enacted/adjudicated
, o Elements of legal order
Rule making through rule following leads to institutional
competence
Rules that define the entire thing
To understand law as a system need to see that rules are created
by following other rules but there may still be other ways of making
rules
o These apply to all legal theories including positivists and non-positivist
ones
Introduction to legal positivism as a theory of law
o Theory
Philosophical doctrine that is developed and put forward by those
that are not legal officials
Does not have validity in itself.
Helps us to understand how legal systems work
A theory about legality
The properties of the things that can be considered legal
What makes some rules legal? Some principles legal?
What makes an authority a legal authority
o Special focus on the origin of law, legal norms and legal authority
Very important the source of the law, different definitions as to
what qualifies
What makes law binding?
Different theories place different emphasis on the various aspects
of law
Doesn’t pay a lot of emphasis on legal practice
o Certain conception of law as institutional normative order
Humanely recognised and formalised aspects of law
Major tenets of legal positivism
o Law is a system of norms stemming from a determinate human source
(not external source, god, reason or moral values)
Very important in positivism
Need to identify a human act to see what counts as valid law
o Sources thesis: validity and content of law can be determined without any
recourse to moral argument
Go back to legislative rules and past case without any appeal to
moral values that the law might serve, eg justice etc
o Separability thesis
Laws do not necessarily need to satisfy the demands of morality
A law is a law even if it is unjust
When evaluate law as law it is irrelevant to look at the
morality
Kelsen’s version of legal positivism
o Kelsen
Austrian living in Vienna between the World Wars
Also experienced Nazi regime and the crude totalitarianism
which threatened individual rights etc.
His theory is in response to this
o Kelsen’s vision
An objective theory of law (scientific method- empiricism)
Course
Divided into 3 sections
1st: Law as a legal system
2nd Law and morality
3rd How law interacts with society and other outside influences
Different sections correspond to different traditions/views of jurisprudence. Can be seen
as antagonistic but also as different part of complimenting cohesiveness
What is jurisprudence?
As a subject
General
o Looks at general truths about law
Law is found in all different laws throughout different societies in
history. All are meant to serve or produce law, transcend the
limitations of space and time.
Legal norms
Standards of behaviour
o Do or do not
o You have the right to do something
o What is right and wrong to do according to the law
Rules and principles
o Rules are generally norms
o Principles are more general. Considered as existing
without a presence in a formal legal text/in the
thinking of a judge
Origins of law
Don’t use sources as it has positivist implications
What the judges say/officials or
What the judges say/officials as far as society agrees
Legal authority
Binding force of law
o Might say that law is binding only to the extent that
statutes make sense in regards to justice
Law might put someone in jail without any
real moral reasons
Similar to legal norms
Legal reasoning
Ways of arguing
Necessary to reach valid judicial decisions?
Legal practice
Ways to go to court
Multidimensional
o Descriptive
, Helps us to understand what law is here and now , there and then
without any valuation whether it is good/bad
What made it law
o Aspirational
Suggests we should mostly emphasise how well these legislative
laws/judicial decisions do in reflection on society
Law has a mission to bring about, what is the values?
o Explanatory
Brings together the two
Says that this is the law, make an evaluation but go beyond that
and find out the social conditions/pragmatic environment that
brought about that law.
Goes beyond making an evaluation
Definitional
o Law as” institutional” “normative” “order”
Neil maccormick
Not just institutional
o Not all humanely recognised and formalised practices
are law
o Family is an institution, starts without the
interference of law
o Law is also institution, formalised in its own way
The constitution gives different values and
also the courts
o Not all institutions are law
Not just normative
o Not all forms of binding action-guidance are law
Law guides our behaviour and shapes it
Some actions have sanctions that persuade
folk from performing an action.
However, personal moral values are
norms that persuade folk
Religious values are also norms
o Neither are laws
Not just order
o Not all systems of posited/customary rules are law
Posited
Put forward by legal officials. Eg judges
or elected officials in parliament
Customary
Comply with it simply because we
know it as practice
o Lots of social rules
But also within law as
well
Less developed
societies have this
o Law is all of these things together
Contested
practical
,The inquiry into the concept of law and how such an enquiry can be useful in practical
everyday life. Jurisprudence considers law as a being with its own existence
A contested and practical subject
each case of litigation/prosecution has an element of contestation. Both parties
say they are right and are supported by the law. This is how law is practiced,
through the resolution of contestation, both in the courts and the parliament
5 judge archetypes how they are different ways to resolve contested issues
o The positivist
The law is what it says in these texts and pronouncements we
recognise as the authoritative sources of law
o The formalist
The law is the answer you get when you follow the rules and
procedures to the letter
Follow the statutes but goes further and interpret them in
the strictest way possible. What does justice mean in this
structure of interpretation.
o The realist
The law is simply a vehicle for our preferred outcome in a case
Very cynical
Judge would have very wide range of decision, it would be
binding anyway. Judges have the ability to shape the law
through judicial decision making how they want y
o The idealist
If look hard enough, the law will reveal the right thing to do
Natural law theories. If look hard enough, the law will reveal
the right thing to do
o We know what is the right thing to do before
beginning the investigate into the law
o Indeterminate judge
Law can often give us no clear guidance no matter how hard we
look
Floats somewhere between them all.
Type of judge that will try to be flexbile and take everything
into account.
Jurisprudence Lecture 2 18th September
Law as a system of rules
Introduction to legal positivism
o Legal positivism is a theory of the law
Law as a legal order places this theory in contrast with other
theories on the law
Law as a system of rules
o A system, not just a set
o Of rules: not necessarily of rules and principles
Rules more concrete and generally enacted/adjudicated
Principles are more general in scope and not necessarily
enacted/adjudicated
, o Elements of legal order
Rule making through rule following leads to institutional
competence
Rules that define the entire thing
To understand law as a system need to see that rules are created
by following other rules but there may still be other ways of making
rules
o These apply to all legal theories including positivists and non-positivist
ones
Introduction to legal positivism as a theory of law
o Theory
Philosophical doctrine that is developed and put forward by those
that are not legal officials
Does not have validity in itself.
Helps us to understand how legal systems work
A theory about legality
The properties of the things that can be considered legal
What makes some rules legal? Some principles legal?
What makes an authority a legal authority
o Special focus on the origin of law, legal norms and legal authority
Very important the source of the law, different definitions as to
what qualifies
What makes law binding?
Different theories place different emphasis on the various aspects
of law
Doesn’t pay a lot of emphasis on legal practice
o Certain conception of law as institutional normative order
Humanely recognised and formalised aspects of law
Major tenets of legal positivism
o Law is a system of norms stemming from a determinate human source
(not external source, god, reason or moral values)
Very important in positivism
Need to identify a human act to see what counts as valid law
o Sources thesis: validity and content of law can be determined without any
recourse to moral argument
Go back to legislative rules and past case without any appeal to
moral values that the law might serve, eg justice etc
o Separability thesis
Laws do not necessarily need to satisfy the demands of morality
A law is a law even if it is unjust
When evaluate law as law it is irrelevant to look at the
morality
Kelsen’s version of legal positivism
o Kelsen
Austrian living in Vienna between the World Wars
Also experienced Nazi regime and the crude totalitarianism
which threatened individual rights etc.
His theory is in response to this
o Kelsen’s vision
An objective theory of law (scientific method- empiricism)