ABSTRACT

This profound and scholarly treatise develops a critical version of legal positivism as the basis for modern legal scholarship. Departing from the formalism of Hart and Kelsen and blending the European tradition of Weber, Habermas and Foucault with the Anglo-American contributions of Dworkin and MacCormick, Tuori presents the normative and practical faces of law as a multilayered phenomenon within which there is an important role for critical legal dogmatics in furthering law's self-understanding and coherence. Its themes also resonate with importance for the development of the European legal system.

part I|2 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter 1|28 pages

Modern Law and its Problems

part II|2 pages

THREE NARRATIVES OF MODERN LAW

part III|2 pages

THE ASPECTS AND THE LEVELS OF THE LAW

chapter 5|26 pages

The Two Faces of the Law

chapter 6|50 pages

The Levels of the Law

chapter 8|26 pages

The Self-Limitation of the Law

chapter 9|40 pages

The Legitimacy of Modern Law

chapter 10|40 pages

Legal Science