•  4
    Overcoming von Wright's anxiety
    Theoria. forthcoming.
    This article examines the anxiety expressed by von Wright over the status of the deontic permission, P, as an independent normative category, given the interdefinability between P and O at the foundation of deontic logic. Two concerns are noted: the reducibility of P to O, and the inadequacy of P to convey a full permission in a social setting. Drawing on resources from the Hohfeldian analytical framework, the relational and aggregate features of permission are explored, and an aggregate concept…Read more
  •  8
    Other People's Liberties
    Ratio Juris 37 (1): 2-24. 2024.
    When we seek a fuller understanding of individual liberty including its relational character, we confront a conundrum. The evident advantages of a single individual possessing liberty cannot be simply transferred to a greater number of beneficiaries. This conundrum is confronted with the resources of Hohfeld's analytical framework, developed specifically to elucidate the practical outworkings of interpersonal relations within the law. Attention is also paid to concerns expressed by von Wright ov…Read more
  •  4
    In Pursuit of Pluralist Jurisprudence (edited book)
    Cambridge University Press. 2017.
    The pluralist turn in jurisprudence has led to a search for new ways of thinking about law. The relationships between state law and other legal orders such as international, customary, transnational or indigenous law are particularly significant in this development. Collecting together new work by leading scholars in the field, this volume considers the basic questions about what would be an appropriate theoretical response to this shift: how precisely is it to be undertaken? Is it called for by…Read more
  •  3
    Methodology
    In Dennis Patterson (ed.), A Companion to Philosophy of Law and Legal Theory, Wiley‐blackwell. 2010.
    This chapter contains sections titled: The Emerging Interest in Methodology Particular Arguments Particular Topics A Concluding Overview References.
  • Introduction
    In Nicole Roughan & Andrew Halpin (eds.), In Pursuit of Pluralist Jurisprudence, Cambridge University Press. 2017.
  •  5
    Property as a commitment to self-determination
    Jurisprudence 13 (4): 626-635. 2022.
    Volume 13, Issue 4, December 2022, Page 626-635.
  •  5
    The Search for Law (review)
    Jurisprudence 5 (2): 409-420. 2014.
  •  19
    Clamshells or bedsteads?
    Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 20 (3): 353-366. 2000.
    This article offers a comparative study of the approaches of Dworkin and Aristotle to money and the market. For Dworkin the importance of this subject lies in the use he makes of the device of a hypothetical auction to provide the basis of a conception of equality of resources, compatible with liberty, and sustained by his view of ethical individualism. The technical adequacy of Dworkin's auction is considered with the assistance of an insight taken from Aristotle's comments on money, which brin…Read more
  •  15
    Rights and Reasons: A Response to Harel
    Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 18 (3): 485-495. 1998.
    This article considers a recent attempt by Alon Harel ((1997) 17 OJLS 101) to shed light on the nature of rights by examining the way derivative rights are recognized as instances of more fundamental rights. It criticizes the way Harel seeks to make a distinction between intrinsic and extrinsic reasons for rights, and so to establish a distinctive operation of practical reasoning for rights. The rationales linked to particular rights, and stated more generally within competing rights theories, a…Read more
  • Allan Hutchinson’s recent book, The Province of Jurisprudence Democratized, considers what is involved in seeking to establish the province of jurisprudence as a distinctive field of inquiry.Hutchinson’s principal concern with the democratization of law, legal theory, and the province of jurisprudence is examined in detail. The process of democratization and its anti-elitist character is traced through Hutchinson’s opposition to the aloof philosophical analysis of the universal in favour of an e…Read more
  •  37
    More comments on rights and claims
    Law and Philosophy 10 (3). 1991.
    This article engages with Alan White’s discussion of the relationship between rights and claims and the literature provoked by it, particularly the response of Neil MacCormick. A further challenge is brought against White’s position of maintaining that there is but one kind of right, and that a right to something does not imply (nor is implied by) a claim to that thing. The analysis offered here insists on acknowledging different meanings of claim and different strengths to claims. A core disti…Read more
  •  38
    Rights, duties, liabilities, and hohfeld
    Legal Theory 13 (1): 23-39. 2007.
    This article engages with Jaffey's recent contribution on the nature of no-prior-duty remedial obligations. Jaffey's use of a right-liability relation and his challenge to Hohfeld's analytical scheme are rejected as unsound. An alternative model distinguishing three pathways to account for remedial obligations and other legal consequences is proposed. This draws on the Hohfeldian scheme but extends it to permit the full expression of reflexive liabilities, mutually correlative liabilities, and t…Read more
  •  18
    This essay is a response to the important central theme of Michael Green's recent article, Dworkin's Fallacy, or What the Philosophy of Language Can't Teach Us about the Law, 89 Va. L. Rev. 1897 (2003), which considers the relationship between the philosophy of language and the philosophy of law. Green argues forcefully that a number of theorists with quite different viewpoints commonly maintain a connection between the two which turns out to be unfounded. It is accepted that it is wrong to assu…Read more
  •  21
    Concepts, Terms, and Fields of Enquiry
    Legal Theory 4 (2): 187-205. 1998.
    This article considers the role of conceptual analysis in jurisprudence. In responding to the earlier article of Brian Bix, Conceptual Questions and Jurisprudence , 1 Legal Theory 465 , it is agreed that the purpose of the theorist must be identified in order to evaluate the merits of the practice of conceptual analysis, but the approach taken here differs from that proposed by Bix. In particular, it is suggested that Bix is wrong to limit stipulation within conceptual analysis to a default opti…Read more
  •  129
    Conceptual Collisions
    Jurisprudence 2 (2): 507-519. 2011.
    Philosophy for International Lawyers: A review of Samantha Besson and John Tasioulas, The Philosophy of International Law by Patrick Capps
  •  52
    Rights and law: analysis and theory
    Distributed in North America by Northwestern University Press. 1997.
    Rights have become,in recent years, a significant concern of legal theorists, as well as of those involved in moral and political philosophy. This new book seeks to move a number of debates forward by developing the analysis of rights and focusing upon more general theoretical considerations relating to rights. The book is divided into five parts. The first includes an explanation of the part played by conceptual analysis within jurisprudence, while the second conducts a re-examination of Hohf…Read more
  • The Methodology of Jurisprudence: Thirty Years Off The Point
    Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence 19 (1). 2006.
    This essay considers the growing interest in the methodology of jurisprudence in the context of a broader examination of the relationship between legal theory and the practice of law. Attention is drawn to the particular puzzles of how theory can both be independent of and yet inform practice, and how methodology can take a similar stance towards theory. Through a detailed analysis of the methodological positions adopted by Dworkin, Raz, and Coleman and Simchen, the conclusion is reached that me…Read more
  •  48
    Disproving the coase theorem?
    Economics and Philosophy 23 (3): 321-341. 2007.
    This essay explores the detailed argument of the Coase Theorem, as found in Ronald Coase’s “The Problem of Social Cost” and subsequently defended by Coase in The Firm, the Market, and the Law. Fascination with the Coase Theorem arises over its apparently unassailable counterintuitive conclusion that the imposition of legal liability has no effect on which of two competing uses of land prevails, and also over the general difficulty in tying down an unqualified statement of the theorem. Instead of…Read more