This paper shows that Fuller and Arendt converge on a different point than the point Rundle focuses on. What Fuller and Arendt seem to share in their legal thoughts is not so much an interest in the experience of law-as-such (the interaction between responsible agency and law as a complex institution), but rather an interest in the junction of law and injustice. By not sufficiently focusing on the experience of legal injustice, Rundle overlooks an important point of divergence between Arendt and Fuller. In particular, Arendt differs from Fuller in her conviction that ‘injustice in a legal form’ is an integral part of modern legal systems. |
Search result: 4 articles
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Book Review |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2016 |
Authors | Tamar de Waal |
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Article |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 3 2014 |
Keywords | legal injustice, legal subject, law and morality, Fuller, Arendt |
Authors | Wouter Veraart |
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Article |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 3 2014 |
Keywords | Arendt, Fuller, Hobbes, political jurisprudence, political freedom, authority, legality |
Authors | Michael Wilkinson |
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Can jurisprudence fruitfully pursue a synthesis of Arendt’s political theory and Fuller’s normative legal philosophy? Might their ideas of the juridical person and the legal subject be aligned as a result of a shared concern for the value of legality, specifically of an institutional complex which is structured through the stability and predictability of the rule of law? It is doubtful that Arendt's concern for the phenomena of plurality, political freedom and action can usefully be brought into line with Fuller's normativist focus on legality, subjectivity and the inner morality of law. This doubt is explored by juxtaposing Arendt's theory of action and her remarks on the revolution, foundation and augmentation of power and authority with Fuller's philosophy that, however critical of its positivist adversaries, remains ultimately tied to a Hobbesian tradition which views authority and power in abstract, hierarchical and individualist terms. |
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Journal | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Issue 1 2014 |
Keywords | Arendt, asylum, refugeeship, right to have rights, statelessness de facto and de jure |
Authors | Nanda Oudejans |
AbstractAuthor's information |
This article argues that the right to have rights, as launched by Hannah Arendt, is relative to refugee displacement and hence translates as a right to asylum. It takes issue with the dominant view that the public/private divide is the locus classicus of the meaning of this primordial right. A different direction of thought is proposed, proceeding from Arendt’s recovery of the spatiality of law. The unencompassibility of place in matters of rights, freedom and equality brings this right into view as a claim at the behest of those who have lost a legal place of their own. This also helps us to gain better understanding of Arendt’s rebuttal of the sharp-edged distinction between refugees and stateless persons and to discover the defiant potential of the right to have rights to illuminate the refugee’s claim to asylum as a claim to an own place where protection can be enjoyed again. |