Download Fault Lines of Globalization: Legal Order and the Politics of A-Legality (Oxford Constitutional Theory) de Hans Lindahl PDF [ePub Mobi] Gratis, Fault Lines of Globalization: Legal Order and the Politics of A-Legality (Oxford Constitutional Theory) Pdf en linea
DescripciĆ³n - ReseƱa del editor The question whether and how boundaries might individuate and thereby be constitutive features of any imaginable legal order has yet to be addressed in a systematic and comprehensive manner by legal and political theory. This book seeks to address this important omission, providing an original contribution to the debate about law in a global setting. Against the widely endorsed assumption that we are now moving towards law without boundaries, it argues that every imaginable legal order, global or otherwise, is bounded in space, time, membership, and content. The book is built up around three main insights. Firstly, that legal orders can best be understood as a form of joint action in which authorities mediate and uphold who ought to do what, where, and when with a view to realising the normative point of acting together. Secondly, that behaviour can call into question the boundaries that determine who ought to do what, where and when: a-legality. Thirdly, that this a-legality reveals boundaries as marking a limit and, to a lesser or greater extent, a fault line of the respective legal order. Legal boundaries reveal ways of ordering the who, what, where, and when of behaviour which have been excluded, yet which remain within the range of practical possibilities accessible to the collective: limits. However legal boundaries also intimate an order which exceeds the range of possibilities accessible to that collective - the fault line of the respective legal order. Careful analysis of a wide range of legal orders, including nomadism, Roman law, classical international law, ius gentium, multinationals, cyberlaw, lex mercatoria, the EU, global regimes of human rights, and space law validates this thesis. What sense, then, can we make of the normativity of the law, if there can be no inclusion without exclusion? Arguing that legal and political theories misunderstand how legal boundaries do their work of including and excluding, the book develops a normative theory of legal order which is alternative to both communitarianism and cosmopolitanism. BiografĆa del autor Hans Lindahl is currently professor of legal philosophy at Tilburg University (Netherlands) and research fellow at the Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Study (South Africa). He has published numerous articles in leading international journals of legal and political philosophy on issues pertaining to representation, constituent power, sovereignty, immigration and distributive justice. He is also editor of the volume A Right to Inclusion and Exclusion? Normative Fault Lines of the EU's Area of Freedom, Security and Justice (Hart, 2009). Lindahl's research seeks to bridge the traditional divide between 'analytical' and 'continental' philosophy, showing how theories of collective action and a phenomenology of the strange yield new insights into the structure and genesis of legal orders.
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