The Unity of the Common Law - Alan Brudner

The Unity of the Common Law

(Autor)

Buch | Hardcover
378 Seiten
2013 | 2nd Revised edition
Oxford University Press (Verlag)
978-0-19-959280-7 (ISBN)
165,20 inkl. MwSt
A fully revised edition of Brudner's classic account of the foundational structures and rationale of private law. Brudner proposes a radical unification of formalist and functionalist understandings of the law. In doing so, he rethinks the foundations of tort, contract, property and unjust enrichment as a unity of private and public law.
In this classic study, Alan Brudner investigates the basic structure of the common law of transactions. For decades, that structure has been the subject of intense debate between formalists, who say that transactional law is a private law for interacting parties, and functionalists, who say that it is a public law serving the collective ends of society. Against both camps, Brudner proposes a unity of formalism and functionalism in which private law is modified by a common good without being subservient to it. Drawing on Hegel's legal philosophy, the author exhibits this unity in each of transactional law's main divisions: property, contract, unjust enrichment, and tort. Each is a whole composed of private-law and public-law parts that complement each other, and the idea connecting the parts to each other is also latently present in each. Moreover, Brudner argues, a single narrative thread connects the divisions of transactional law to each other. Not a row of disconnected fields, transactional law is rather a story about the realization in law of the agent's claim to be a dignified end-master of its body, its acquisitions, and the shape of its life. Transactional law's divisions are stages in the progress toward that goal, each generating a potential developed by the next. Thus, contract law fulfils what is incompletely realized in property law, negligence law what is germinal in contract law, public insurance what is seminal in negligence law, and transactional law as a whole what is underdeveloped in public insurance. The end-point is the limit of what a transactional law can contribute to a life sufficient for dignity.

Reconfigured and expanded with a contribution by Jennifer Nadler, The Unity of the Common Law stands out among contemporary theories of private law in that it depicts private law as purposive without being instrumental and as autonomous without being emptily formal.

Alan Brudner is Professor Emeritus of Law and Political Science at the University of Toronto. He is the author of Punishment and Freedom (Oxford, 2009), Constitutional Goods (Oxford, 2004), and The Unity of the Common Law: Studies in Hegelian Jurisprudence (California, 1995). He was elected to the Royal Society of Canada in 2011.

PART 1; PART 2; PART 3

Erscheint lt. Verlag 3.10.2013
Verlagsort Oxford
Sprache englisch
Maße 162 x 241 mm
Gewicht 726 g
Themenwelt Recht / Steuern Allgemeines / Lexika
Recht / Steuern EU / Internationales Recht
ISBN-10 0-19-959280-2 / 0199592802
ISBN-13 978-0-19-959280-7 / 9780199592807
Zustand Neuware
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