This explorative volume brings together scholars to map the domain of public law and, despite its epigrammatic title, it is a towering intellectual contribution to the dynamism of public law.
P. Sean Morris, University of Helsinki, Political Studies Review
A useful, reflective contribution to a subject whose importance goes well beyond academia.
Commonwealth Lawyer
Public law has been conceived in many different ways, sometimes overlapping, often conflicting. However in recent years a common theme running through the discussions of public law is one of loss. What function and future can public law have in this rapidly transforming landscape, where globalized states and supranational institutions have ever-increasing importance?
The contributions to this volume take stock of the idea, concepts, and values of public law as it has developed alongside the growth of the modern state, and assess its continued usefulness as a distinct area of legal inquiry and normativity in light of various historical trends and contemporary pressures affecting the global configuration of law in general.
Divided into three parts, the first provides a conceptual, philosophical, and historical understanding of the nature of public law, the nature of private law and the relationship between the public, the private, and the concept of law. The second part focuses on the domains, values, and functions of public law in contemporary (state) legal practice, as seen, in part, through its relationship with private domains, values, and functions. The final part engages with the new legal scholarship on global transformation, analysing the changes in public law at the national level, including the new forms of interpenetration of public and private in the market state, as well as exploring the ubiquitous use of public law values and concepts beyond the state.
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The rapidly transforming legal landscape calls into question the conceptual and value structures modern concepts of public law are built upon. Examining the nature and scope of public law, this volume casts new light on the contemporary and future status of public law, asking what might come after public law in a global legal world.
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1. Introduction ; PART ONE: THE NATURE OF PUBLIC AND PRIVATE LAW ; 2. The Nature of Public Law ; 3. Public Law and the Emergence of the Political ; 4. Private and Public: Some Banalities About a Platitude ; 5. The Public, the Private, and the Law ; PART TWO: THE DOMAIN, VALUES, AND FUNCTIONS OF PUBLIC LAW ; 6. Defending the Domain of Public Law ; 7. Public Law and Democracy: The Case of Constitutional Rights ; 8. The Nation as 'The Public': The Resilient Functionalism of Public Law ; 9. Public Law, Private Law, and National Identity ; PART THREE: THE EVOLUTION OF PUBLIC LAW? ; 10. Globalization and the Transcendence of the Public/Private Divide - What is Public Law under Conditions of Globalization? ; 11. (The Failure of) Public law and the Deliberative Turn ; 12. The Postnational Horizon of Constitutionalism and Public Law: Paradigm Extension or Paradigm Exhaustion? ; 13. The Global Governance of Public Law ; 14. The (re)Constitution of the Public
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Examines the role of public law within the modern, increasingly globalized, state, an important, yet understudied, area of constitutional law theory
Draws conclusions for the future of public law in the context of global governance
Studies the domain of public law, the public/private divide, and the relationship between public law and private law
Contributors to the volume include Benedict Kingsbury, Martin Loughlin, Hector MacQueen, and Neil Walker
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Cormac Mac Amhlaigh is a Senior Lecturer in Public Law at the University of Edinburgh School of Law. He received his PhD from the European University Institute and his research focuses on UK constitutional law, public law and constitutional theory, the relevance and use of public law concepts beyond the state, and the theory and practice of human rights law. Claudio Michelon is Professor of Philosophy of Law at the University of Edinburgh School of Law. His current
research focuses on legal decision-making, legal epistemology, and private law theory. He is the author of Being Apart from Reasons (Springer, 2006) and Aceitação e objetividade (2004). Neil Walker
holds the Regius Chair of Public Law and the Law of Nature and Nations at the University of Edinburgh. He is the author or editor of numerous volumes, including The Paradox of Constitutionalism (with Martin Loughlin, OUP 2007), Europe's Area of Freedom, Security, and Justice (OUP 2004), Civlizing Security ( CUP, 2007) with Ian Loader, and Europe's Constitutional Mosaic ( Hart, 2011) with Jo Shaw and Stephen Tierney.
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Examines the role of public law within the modern, increasingly globalized, state, an important, yet understudied, area of constitutional law theory
Draws conclusions for the future of public law in the context of global governance
Studies the domain of public law, the public/private divide, and the relationship between public law and private law
Contributors to the volume include Benedict Kingsbury, Martin Loughlin, Hector MacQueen, and Neil Walker
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780199669318
Publisert
2013
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
642 gr
Høyde
240 mm
Bredde
161 mm
Dybde
26 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
328