•  14
    Review of Andrew Arato, The Adventures of the Constituent Power (review)
    with Mikołaj Barczentewicz and Alice Schneider
    American Journal of Comparative Law 67. 2019.
  • I Am Not Your (Founding) Father
    In Richard Albert, Nishchal Basnyat & Menaka Guruswamy (eds.), Founding Moments in Constitutionalism, Hart Publishing. 2019.
    Lawyers across the globe routinely talk about what the ‘founding fathers’ or the ‘framers’ of their constitution (or a founding treaty) meant, expected, intended and so on. The point of this paper is that some of the founding fathers talk in legal contexts is confused, because it refers to people who did not make the constitution. I help to dispel the confusion through analysis of what does it mean to be an agent behind making a constitution as law – what does it mean to be a constitution-maker.…Read more
  •  21
    The bulk of the legal literature that either builds on or criticizes Hayek focuses on Hayek’s work specifically devoted to law, in particular to the rule of law and to the common law. I aim to show that there is jurisprudentially valuable insight to be gained by reflecting on Hayek’s other work. I provide here a sketch of a synthesis of Hayek’s thought with the current standard framework in general theory (philosophy) of law, that of H. L. A. Hart. I begin by presenting the outlines of Hart’s mo…Read more
  •  32
    The Limits of Natural Law Originalism
    Notre Dame Law Review Online 93 115-130. 2018.
    In “Enduring Originalism,” Jeffrey Pojanowski and Kevin C. Walsh outline how originalism in constitutional interpretation can be grounded in modern natural law theory as developed by John Finnis. Their argument to that effect is powerful and constitutes a welcome addition both to natural law theory and to originalist theory. However, the authors chose to present their account as a superior alternative to, or modification of, “positive” (“original-law”) originalism of Stephen Sachs and William Ba…Read more
  •  94
    The Illuminati Problem and Rules of Recognition
    Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 38 (3): 500-527. 2018.
    How to distinguish law from non-legal but systematic and rule-guided practices of legal officials? This issue features prominently in the debate on ‘positive originalism’ in US constitutional law, and in similar fundamental controversies in other legal orders. I take it as a question about content and constitution of ultimate rules of recognition. Legal philosophers have been too quick in dealing with this problem. I argue that there is more space to claim that non-officials have a constitutive …Read more