The role that Paul Scholten assigns to conscience in his legal methodology still leads to heated discussions in literature after almost 100 years. Recognizing that in case law the conscience of the judge can be of decisive importance is apparently problematic. It would facilitate political court rulings, make judicial judgment uncontrollable and could be arbitrary for the parties to the legal dispute. Not only Scholten’s view on the role of conscience in judicial decision making is “a stumbling block”. At least as great is the fuss about his representation of conscience. Only Christian lawyers could identify with this. This article attempts to shed new light on the above points of criticism by drawing attention to the following aspects of Scholten’s legal methodology: the role of the facts in establishing the law, the nature of the legal judgment and finally the grounds on which conscience may be determined. |
Search result: 32 articles
Article |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2021 |
Keywords | Geweten, feiten, Scholten, Kierkegaard, naastenliefde |
Authors | Jos Vleugel |
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Article |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2020 |
Authors | Vincent Dupont |
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Ever since it was published in 2015, the judgment of the The Hague court in the so-called Urgenda-case, and the subsequent decisions of the appellate and cassation courts confirming it, have been met with repeated and vivid critiques. By recognizing the necessity of the reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, and furthermore imposing a certain reduction level on the Dutch state, the judgments in the cases at hand gave rise to many questions concerning the position of the judiciary in the matter, and in Dutch society as a whole. This article attempts in the first place to situate the positions of the different actors intervening in the Urgenda-case within a legal-theoretical framework. The contribution subsequently explores the strategic possibilities that an alternative understanding of law could offer to the judges, focusing specifically on the use of legal instruments stemming from international law, brought into the reasoning of the national judge. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2019 |
Keywords | oprichting, doelstelling, band met de rechtspraktijk, rechtsfilosofie en rechtstheorie, internationalisering (van Duits naar Engels) |
Authors | Corjo Jansen |
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De Vereeniging voor Wijsbegeerte des Rechts (VWR) is opgericht op 28 december 1918. Zij had tot doel de studie van de rechtsfilosofie en het maatschappelijk leven. Deze studie moest tevens relevant zijn voor de rechtspraktijk. Vanaf haar oprichting kende de VWR een sterke internationale oriëntatie, aanvankelijk gericht op Duitsland, later vooral op het Verenigd Koninkrijk en de VS. In de jaren zeventig en tachtig van de vorige eeuw beleefde de VWR wat betreft belangstelling en ledenaantal haar hoogtepunt. In 2016 besloot zij – na een gestage neergang – de band met de Nederlandstalige (praktijk)jurist weer aan te halen. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2019 |
Keywords | Radbruch, Kisch, Langemeijer, Toetsingsarrest, VWR |
Authors | Wouter Veraart |
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Hoe was het met de Nederlandse rechtsfilosofie gesteld in de eerste jaren na de bevrijding? In die periode lag binnen de Vereniging voor Wijsbegeerte des Rechts (VWR) het accent op de verhouding tussen recht en gerechtigheid in het licht van het recente verleden. Dit artikel bespreekt interventies van drie actieve VWR-leden in de jaren 1946-1949: C.M.O. van Nispen tot Sevenaer, I. Kisch en G.E. Langemeijer. Gelet op het sterke accent op de relatie tussen recht en moraal in deze periode, is het niet verwonderlijk dat de rechtsfilosofie van Gustav Radbruch destijds binnen de VWR veel bijval kreeg. Wat was Radbruchs invloed op deze drie rechtsfilosofen? Het artikel besluit met een bespreking van de herdenkingsrede die VWR-voorzitter M.P. Vrij in 1949 uitsprak bij het dertigjarig bestaan. Deze rede markeert het eindpunt van vier jaar van intensieve aandacht voor de rechtsfilosofische implicaties van de ervaring van juridisch onrecht. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2019 |
Keywords | onrecht, Slachtofferrechten, Benjamin, Shklar |
Authors | Nanda Oudejans and Antony Pemberton |
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Hoewel de rechtspositie van slachtoffers de afgelopen decennia verstevigd lijkt, blijft de relatie tussen slachtoffer en strafrecht ongemakkelijk. Rechtswetenschappers tonen zich bezorgd dat de toenemende aandacht voor de belangen van slachtoffers uitmondt in ‘geïnstitutionaliseerde wreedheid.’ Deze zorg wordt echter gevoed door een verkeerd begrip van slachtofferschap en heeft slecht begrepen wat het slachtoffer nu eigenlijk van het recht verlangt. Deze bijdrage probeert de vraag van het slachtoffer aan het recht tot begrip te brengen. Wij zullen de onrechtservaring van het slachtoffer conceptualiseren als een ontologisch alleen en verlaten zijn van het slachtoffer. Het aanknopingspunt om de relatie tussen slachtoffer en recht opnieuw te denken zoeken wij in deze verlatenheid. De kern van het betoog is dat het slachtoffer (mede) in het recht beschutting zoekt tegen deze verlatenheid, maar ook altijd onvermijdelijk tegen de grenzen van het recht aanloopt. Van een rechtssysteem dat zich volledig uitlevert aan de noden van slachtoffers kan dan ook geen sprake zijn. Integendeel, het recht moet zijn belang voor slachtoffers deels zien in de onderkenning van zijn eigen beperkingen om onrecht te keren, in plaats van de onrechtservaring van het slachtoffer weg te moffelen, te koloniseren of ridiculiseren. |
Book Review |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2018 |
Keywords | Sovereignty, people, rule of recognition, H.L.A. Hart |
Authors | Bertjan Wolthuis |
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‘Sovereignties’ provides clear insights in various aspects of sovereignty, but Waltermann’s approach hides certain issues from view. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2014 |
Keywords | interactionism, Lon Fuller, interactional law, legal pluralism, concept of law |
Authors | Wibren van der Burg |
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Two phenomena that challenge theories of law in the beginning of the twenty-first century are the regulatory explosion and the emergence of horizontal and interactional forms of law. In this paper, I develop a theory that can address these two phenomena, namely legal interactionism, a theory inspired by the work of Fuller and Selznick. In a pluralist approach, legal interactionism recognizes both interactional law and enacted law, as well as other sources such as contract. We should aim for a pluralistic and gradual concept of law. Because of this pluralist and gradual character, legal interactionism can also do justice to global legal pluralism and to the dynamic intertwinement of health law and bioethics. |
Book Review |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2012 |
Authors | Thom Holterman |
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Book Review |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2012 |
Authors | Jaap Zwart and Femke Storm |
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Book Review |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2011 |
Authors | Femke Storm and Jaap Zwart |
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Book review of Peter Rijpkema, Gijs van Donselaar, Bruno Verbeek, Henri Wijsbek (red.), Als vuur |
Afshin Ellian, Timo Slootweg en Carel Smith (red.), Recht, beslissing en geweten |
Editorial |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2009 |
Authors | Jaap Hage |
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In an editorial article the editors supply a commentary on the topics covered in the journal. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2009 |
Keywords | autonomie, legaliteit, Brouwer, Fuller, certificering |
Authors | Pauline Westerman |
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Brouwer defended the view that the autonomy of the individual citizen is furthered by articulated, precise and clear legislation. The question arises whether all kinds of rules can be said to enhance such autonomy. It is argued that a distinction should be drawn between rules that dictate desirable outcomes, on the one hand, and rules that determine the way the game is played, on the other. Rules of the game often reflect the way they were drafted and can be seen as the embodiment of power relations between rule-makers. Rules that dictate outcomes, on the other hand, are often drafted by experts who analyse the goals to be reached. The view is defended that only rules of the game – potentially – enhance the autonomy of the citizen, whereas outcome-rules are potentially manipulative, tending to exclude those who are ill-equipped to realize the prescribed outcomes. The virtues of rules therefore do not merely reside in their clear and precise nature, but are largely derived from their capacity to regulate the relations amongst citizens who were included in the process of rulemaking. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2009 |
Keywords | rechtszekerheid, in dubio pro libertate, Brouwer, rechtspositivisme, constructivisme |
Authors | Marc Loth |
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This paper addresses the principle of legal certainty, which was central in the work of Bob Brouwer. He both regretted and disputed the decline of this principle in the theory and practice of law, trying to defend it against the spirit of the time. I argue that this attempt was in vain, because it opposes recent developments in law, as is illustrated by a notorious case of the European Court of Human Rights. Moreover, these developments invoke a constructivist account of legal certainty, which opposes Brouwer’s legal positivist account. Additionally, this meta-level shows that legal certainty in its classical form is indefensible, which – of course – does not mean that it is senseless altogether. On the contrary, the principle of legal certainty does have meaning in current legal systems, and it is the task of new generations of young scholars to try to get a grip on it. In doing so, they will undoubtedly make use of Brouwer’s work, which excels both in the depth of thinking and the clarity of writing. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2009 |
Keywords | rechtsbeginselen, rechtspositivisme, Brouwer, Dworkin, soft positivism |
Authors | Arend Soeteman |
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In this contribution I argue that Brouwer’s legal positivism suffers from an internal tension that is not easily solved. This tension stems from the combination of two strands in Brouwer’s thought. The first is that Brouwer wants to stick to the legal positivist view that the law is fixed by convention. The second is that there can be exceptions to the application of legal rules, based on legal principles. The combination of these two strands is, I argue, problematic, because the conventional basis for legal principles will usually be lacking in hard cases. One may then argue, as Brouwer does, that where conventions are lacking there is no law and the judge is not bound by the law. But then exceptions to rules are also allowed where there are no conventional principles to justify these exceptions. This contradicts Brouwer’s starting point that exceptions to the application of rules are possible on the basis of legal principles. |
Article |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2009 |
Keywords | recht als sociaal verschijnsel, recht en praktische rede, recht en moraal, Brouwer |
Authors | Jaap Hage |
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Brouwer argued against a vision of the law in which moral considerations partly determine the contents of the law. He did this for moral reasons, mainly because of the uncertainty such a vision would cause. This seems a strange view because it means that the nature of the law would depend on moral considerations concerning legal certainty. Most of the present paper is devoted to exploring two conceptions of the law, law as social fact and law as practical reason. It is argued that a view like Brouwer’s fits in the law as practical reason conception and is therefore not so strange as might seem at first sight. |
Book Review |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 3 2008 |
Keywords | politieke filosofie, contract, legaliteit, geweld, menselijke gedraging, auteur, noodzakelijkheid, dwang, machine, overeenkomst |
Authors | L. Logister |
Book Review |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 3 2007 |
Authors | T. Holterman |
Book Review |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 3 2007 |
Keywords | abortus provocatus, opperrechter, rechtspraak, aanvaring, auteur, character, erfgenaam, euthanasie, geheim van de raadkamer, interest |
Authors | B. Klink |
Article |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 2 2006 |
Keywords | idee, geschrift, justitiabele, citaat, bewijslast, mededeling, model, noodzakelijkheid, uitgave, verlies |
Authors | P. Schilfgaarde |