Introduction to this special issue of NJLP. |
Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy
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Miscellaneous |
Wetenschap als kunstwerk: In Memoriam Willem Witteveen |
Authors | Sanne Taekema and Bart van Klink |
Author's information |
Introduction |
Kristen Rundle: Legal Subjects and Juridical Persons: Developing Public Legal Theory through Fuller and Arendt |
Keywords | Fuller, Arendt, Rundle |
Authors | Morag Goodwin, Michiel Besters and Rudolf Rijgersberg |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Article |
Legal Subjects and Juridical Persons: Developing Public Legal Theory through Fuller and Arendt |
Keywords | Fuller, Arendt, legal subject, juridical person, public rule of law theory |
Authors | Kristen Rundle |
AbstractAuthor's information |
The ‘public’ character of the kind of rule of law theorizing with which Lon Fuller was engaged is signalled especially in his attention to the very notion of being a ’legal subject’ at all. This point is central to the aim of this paper to explore the animating commitments, of substance and method alike, of a particular direction of legal theorizing: one which commences its inquiry from an assessment of conditions of personhood within a public legal frame. Opening up this inquiry to resources beyond Fuller, the paper makes a novel move in its consideration of how the political theorist Hannah Arendt’s reflections on the ‘juridical person’ might aid a legal theoretical enterprise of this kind. |
Article |
Political Jurisprudence or Institutional Normativism? Maintaining the Difference Between Arendt and Fuller |
Keywords | Arendt, Fuller, Hobbes, political jurisprudence, political freedom, authority, legality |
Authors | Michael Wilkinson |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Can jurisprudence fruitfully pursue a synthesis of Arendt’s political theory and Fuller’s normative legal philosophy? Might their ideas of the juridical person and the legal subject be aligned as a result of a shared concern for the value of legality, specifically of an institutional complex which is structured through the stability and predictability of the rule of law? It is doubtful that Arendt's concern for the phenomena of plurality, political freedom and action can usefully be brought into line with Fuller's normativist focus on legality, subjectivity and the inner morality of law. This doubt is explored by juxtaposing Arendt's theory of action and her remarks on the revolution, foundation and augmentation of power and authority with Fuller's philosophy that, however critical of its positivist adversaries, remains ultimately tied to a Hobbesian tradition which views authority and power in abstract, hierarchical and individualist terms. |
Article |
Lawyers Doing Philosophy |
Keywords | human agency, legal doctrine, command theory of law, Fuller, Arendt |
Authors | Pauline Westerman |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Rundle criticizes the command conception of law by means of Fuller’s and Arendt’s concept of human agency. However, neither of these two authors derive law from human agency, as Rundle seems to think. Instead they stress that personhood can only be attributed to physical human beings on the basis of law. Moreover, their theories cannot be understood as answers to Rundle’s question – whatever that may be – but as answers to their own questions and concerns. In the case of Arendt and Fuller, these concerns were so different that the enterprise to reconcile them seems futile. Rundle’s approach can be understood as the attempt to deal with philosophy as if it were legal doctrine. |
Article |
The Experience of Legal Injustice |
Keywords | legal injustice, legal subject, law and morality, Fuller, Arendt |
Authors | Wouter Veraart |
AbstractAuthor's information |
This paper shows that Fuller and Arendt converge on a different point than the point Rundle focuses on. What Fuller and Arendt seem to share in their legal thoughts is not so much an interest in the experience of law-as-such (the interaction between responsible agency and law as a complex institution), but rather an interest in the junction of law and injustice. By not sufficiently focusing on the experience of legal injustice, Rundle overlooks an important point of divergence between Arendt and Fuller. In particular, Arendt differs from Fuller in her conviction that ‘injustice in a legal form’ is an integral part of modern legal systems. |
Article |
Fuller and Arendt: A Happy Marriage? Comment on Rundle |
Keywords | Fuller, Arendt, Radbruch, legal certainty |
Authors | Thomas Mertens |
AbstractAuthor's information |
In her paper, Rundle seeks to develop a normative legal theory that is distinctively public. Building on her book, Forms Liberate, she seeks to bring Fuller’s legal theory into conversation with Arendt’s political theory. In this comment, I present some hesitations with regard to the fruitfulness of this conversation. It concludes with the suggestion to explore how Radbruch’s ‘idea of law’ could be fruitful for the overall jurisprudential project Rundle seeks to develop in her work. |
Article |
Reply |
Keywords | Fuller, Arendt, normativism, methodology, the rule of law |
Authors | Kristen Rundle |
AbstractAuthor's information |
Author’s reply to four commentaries on ‘Legal Subjects and Juridical Persons: Developing Public Legal Theory through Fuller and Arendt.’ |