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The Idea of a Pure Theory of Law: An Interpretation and Defence
By (Author) Dr Christoph Kletzer
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
28th May 2020
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Methods, theory and philosophy of law
340.1
Paperback
156
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
231g
Most contemporary legal philosophers tend to take force to be an accessory to the law. According to this prevalent view the law primarily consists of a series of demands made on us; force, conversely, comes into play only when these demands fail to be satisfied. This book claims that this model should be jettisoned in favour of a radically different one: according to the proposed view, force is not an accessory to the law but rather its attribute. The law is not simply a set of rules incidentally guaranteed by force, but it should be understood as essentially rules about force. The book explores in detail the nature of this claim and develops its corollaries. It then provides an overview of the contemporary jurisprudential debates relating to force and violence, and defends its claims against well-known counter-arguments by Hart, Raz and others. This book offers an innovative insight into the concept of Pure Theory. In contrast to what was claimed by Hans Kelsen, the most eminent contributor to this theory, the author argues that the core insight of the Pure Theory is not to be found in the concept of a basic norm, or in the supposed absence of a conceptual relation between law and morality, but rather in the fundamental and comprehensive reformulation of how to model the functioning of the law intended as an ordering of force and violence.
The book is an elegant, clear and admirably succinct defence of the pure theory of law. -- William Lucy, Law School, Durham University * Modern Law Review *
Christoph Kletzer is Senior Lecturer in Legal Philosophy at King's College London.