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A Theory of Legal Obligation


ISBN13: 9781108465878
Published: May 2021
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback (Hardback in 2019)_
Price: £36.99
Hardback edition , ISBN13 9781108475105



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The focus of this monograph lies in the construction of a theory of legal obligation, understanding it as a discrete notion with its own defining traits. In this work, Bertea specifically addresses the question: how should legal obligation be distinctively conceptualized? The conceptualization of legal obligation he defends in this work gradually emerges from a critical assessment of the theories of legal obligation that have been most influential in the contemporary legal-theoretical debate. Building on such critical analysis, Bertea's study purports to offer a novel and unconventional conceptualization of legal obligation, which is characterized as a law-engendered intersubjective reason for carrying out certain courses of conduct.

  • Questions how should legal obligation be distinctively conceptualized and defends a comprehensive and original theory of legal obligation
  • Critically assesses the most influential theoretical existing models and presents a new, alternative concept of legal obligation
  • Explores a unique methodology of inquiry that has not been used in jurisprudence before and is not reducible to any of the traditional methods employed

Subjects:
Jurisprudence
Contents:
Introduction
1. The concept of obligation
2. Contemporary approaches to legal obligations: a preliminary map
3. The social-practice account
4. The interpretivist account
5. The conventionalist reason account
6. The exclusionary reason account
7. A revisionary Kantian conception
8. Further dimensions of the revisionary Kantian conception
9. The robust reason account
10. The method of presuppositional interpretation
Conclusion