Foundations of Public Law.
This book develops Martin Loughlin's distinctive and provocative theory of public law, first outlined in The Idea of Public Law. Tracing the historical evolution of the concept of public law, the book rethinks the foundational concepts of state, constitution, and government, arguing that public...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Oxford :
OUP Oxford,
2014.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Introduction: Rediscovering Public Law; I. ORIGINS; 1. Medieval Origins; I. The Theological-Political Question; II. The Papal Monarchy; III. Empire and Papacy; IV. Theocratic Kingship; V. Regnum and Sacerdotium; VI. Conciliarism; VII. The Secularization of Government; VIII. Medieval and Modern Constitutionalism; 2. The Birth of Public Law; I. The Methodological Turn; II. Bodin's Method; III. Absolutism; IV. The Constitution of Sovereignty; V. Modern Natural Law: Subjective Right, Security, and Sociability; VI. Transition Paradoxes; II. FORMATION; 3. The Architecture of Public Law.
- I. Right OrderingII. Early-Modern Formation; III. The Architectural Metaphor; IV. The Architecture of Power; V. Constitutional Architecture; 4. The Science of Political Right: I; I. Political Right; II. Rousseau's Science of Political Right; III. Sovereignty and Government in The Social Contract; IV. Modernity and German Idealism: Kant's Rechtslehre; V. The Formal Science of Political Right; 5. The Science of Political Right: II; I. Rousseau's Pessimism; II. The Political Pact in Historical Practice; III. Rousseau's Sociology of Political Right; IV. Fichte's Foundations of Natural Right.
- V. The Concept of Political Right in Hegel's RechtsphilosophieVI. The Struggle for Recognition; 6. Political Jurisprudence; I. Public Law as Political Jurisprudence; II. Power; III. Liberty; IV. The Grammar of Public Law; III. STATE; 7. The Concept of the State; I. Sovereignty: A Conceptual Sketch; II. Status, Estate, State; III. Staatslehre; IV. Community, Society, State; V. The State as a Scheme of Intelligibility; 8. The Constitution of the State; I. The Concept of the Constitution; II. The Normative Power of the Factual; III. Constituent Power; IV. The Public Sphere.
- V. Droit Politique as the Constitution of the State9. State Formation; I. European State-building Practices; II. The Formation of the English Parliament; III. Parliament and the Formation of the Modern State; IV. The Struggle for Responsible Government; V. The Formation of the Parliamentary State; VI. Representative and Responsible Government; VII. State, Law, and Constitution; IV. CONSTITUTION; 10. The Constitutional Contract; I. Modern Constitutions; II. The Constitution as Contract; III. Revolution and Constitution; IV. The Constitution as Fundamental Law; V. Constitutional Maintenance.
- VI. Constitutional PatriotismVII. Reflexive Constitutionalism; 11. Rechtsstaat, Rule of Law, l'Etat de droit; I. The Ambiguous Character of the Rule of Law; II. Origins; III. Mode of Association; IV. The Rule of Law as Liberal Aspiration; V. Rechtsstaat or Staatsrecht?; 12. Constitutional Rights; I. Natural Rights, Civil Rights, Constitutional Rights; II. Civil Society; III. Bills of Rights; IV. Constitutional Adjudication; V. Subjective Rights and Objective Law; V. GOVERNMENT; 13. The Prerogatives of Government; I. Prerogative Power; II. Locke on the Prerogative.