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    Review of Lenn Goodman's On Justice (1st 3d.)
  • Trust in(g) Eric
    In De Oliveira A. C. (ed.), As interações sensíveis: Ensaios de sociossemiótica a partir da obra de Eric Landowski, Editions Estação Das Letras E Cores E Editora Cps. pp. 81-100. 2013.
    This article is partly an exercise in academic autobiography, seeking to make sense of the different ways in which I have applied semiotics to secular law on the one hand, Jewish law on the other. The very fact that it can be applied to both shows that its claims are methodological. But it also indicates a possible reformulation of the semiotic issues in philosophical terms: we may view the relationship between the semantic and pragmatic levels in terms of the relationship/balance between certai…Read more
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    S. Azuelos-Atias, A Pragmatic Analysis of Legal Proofs of Criminal Intent [REVIEW]
    International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 22 (3): 365-372. 2009.
  •  91
    Semiotics and legal theory
    Routledge & Kegan Paul. 1985.
    Later reprinted by Deborah Charles Publications (and not available from Amazon), this book expounds and comments on the application of Greimasian semiotics to a legal text, as found in the article by Greimas and Landowski in Greimas, Sémiotique et Sciences Sociales (1976), compares this with the semiotic presuppositions of Hart, Dworkin, MacCormick and Kelsen, and offers my own analysis of the implications of such semiotic analysis for legal theory, including some more recent radical non-positiv…Read more
  •  26
    On Scholarly Developments in Legal Semiotics
    Ratio Juris 3 (3): 415-424. 1990.
    This article reviews the opportunities for legal semiotics to contribute to legal philosophy, legal sociology, the reading of legal texts and the analysis of legal language (with bibliography) and surveys the institutional development of legal semiotics.
  • Legal Semiotics and Semiotic Aspects of Jurisprudence
    In Wagner Anne & Broekman Jan (eds.), , eds., Prospects of Legal Semiotics, Springer. pp. 3-36. 2012.
    Originally written in 1990, this reviews largely late 20th century debates on the study of law as Logic, Discourse, or Experience; the Unity of the Legal System and the Problem of Reference; Semiotic Presuppositions of Traditional Jurisprudence (Austin, Hart, Kelsen, Dworkin, Legal Realisms); then turns to legal philosophies explicitly Employing Forms of Semiotics (Kalinowski, the Italian Analytical School, Rhetorical and Pragmatic Approaches, Sociological and Socio-Linguistic Approaches, Peirci…Read more
  •  53
    Making sense in jurisprudence
    Deborah Charles Publications. 1996.
    This book reviews the classical schools of jurisprudence with particular reference to their linguistic presuppositions, and summarises an alternative account based on Paris school semiotics. Detailed ToC available from linked web page. NOT available from Amazon.
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    Liability for Animals: An Historico-Structural Comparison (review)
    International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 24 (3): 259-289. 2011.
    This account of civil liability for animals in a range of ancient, mediaeval and modern legal systems (based on a series of studies conducted early in my career: (s.1)) uses semiotic analysis to supplement the insights of conventional legal history, thus balancing diachronic and synchronic approaches. It reinforces the conventional historical sensitivity to anachronism in two respects: (1) (logical) inference of underlying values from concrete rules (rather than attending to literary features of…Read more
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    Jurisprudence and Communication: Secular and Religious
    International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 27 (3): 463-484. 2014.
    In considering Van Schooten’s study of the Eric O. case (s.1), I ask whether the different approaches taken by the two different “legal institutions”—the prosecuting authorities on the one hand, the courts on the other—are reflective of different images of warfare (a semantic difference) or of the different images each group holds of its own role (a pragmatic difference). If we consider these two “legal institutions” as distinct semiotic groups (s.2), is there an inevitable “communication defici…Read more
  • An Introduction to the History and Sources of Jewish Law (edited book)
    with N. S. Hecht, S. M. Passamaneck, Daniela Piattelli, and Alfredo Rabello
    Oxford University Press UK. 1996.
    Jewish law has a history stretching from the early period to the modern State of Israel, encompassing the Talmud, Geonic and later codifications, the Spanish Golden Age, medieval and modern responsa, the Holocaust and modern reforms. Fifteen distinct periods are separately studied in this volume, each one by a leading specialist, and the emphasis throughout is on the development of the institutions and sources of the law.
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    Introduction
    International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 27 (3): 421-423. 2014.
    This Special Issue reflects a very special occasion. On 13 January 2012, the Tilburg Law School marked the retirement of Associate Professor Dr. Hanneke van Schooten and the recent publication of her latest book, Jurisprudence and Communication (Liverpool: Deborah Charles Publications, 2011) with a special colloquium, at which Dr. Van Schooten summarised the findings of her book, and four colleagues offered responses to it, three (by Jackson, van Roermund and Witteveen, here developed further).
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    In this paper, I ask whether mishpat ivri (Jewish Law) is appropriately conceived as a “legal system”. I review Menachem Elon’s use of a “Sources” Theory of Law (based on Salmond) in his account of Mishpat Ivri; the status of religious law from the viewpoint of jurisprudence itself (Bentham, Austin and Kelsen); then the use of sources (and the approach to “dogmatic error”) by halakhic authorities in discussing the problems of the agunah (“chained wife”), which I suggest points to a theory more r…Read more
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    Despite the efforts of some modern Jewish law scholars, it is difficult to apply models of secular jurisprudence (whether positivist or Dworkinian) to the Jewish legal system. Internal analysis suggests that the “secondary rules” of the system are far too fragile. Rather, the system appears to privilege trust over objectively determinable truth. (But perhaps trust is a concept to which greater attention should be paid also in secular jurisprudence, as a legal realism informed by semiotics might …Read more
  • “Constructing a Theory of Halakhah”
    Jewish Law Association Website (Resources Page). 2012.
    In this article, I explore some facets of the roles of legal philosophy on the one hand, theology on the other, in the construction of a theory of Jewish Law (halakhah). I commence with three issues arising primarily from the use of legal philosophy as a model for the construction of a theory of halakhah: (A) the authority system, viewed in terms of a theory of sources; (B) the relationship between law and morality; (C) the judicial role. I then turn to the theological model, noting from the sta…Read more
  • After a section of Methodological Preliminaries, I consider Truth and Argumentation in the Jewish Legal Tradition, under the following subheadings: Truth in Judaism, Truth and Norms, Truth and Language, Truth and Logic, Truth and Argumentation. I thus use an external framework in order to pose questions to the Jewish legal tradition, and identify internal resources which may provide partial answers to these questions. But are these partial answers so peculiar, theological, culturally contingent…Read more
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    Law, Fact and Narrative Coherence
    Deborah Charles Publications. 1988.
    his book develops an account of legal reasoning based on underlying narrative patterns, and compares other such approaches in legal philosophy, psychology and history. Download full ToC and Preface from http://www.legaltheory.demon.co.uk/books_lfnc.html