How to Do Things with Legal Doctrine:
Gespeichert in:
Beteilige Person: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Veröffentlicht: |
Chicago
University of Chicago Press
2020
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Schlagwörter: | |
Umfang: | 1 Online-Ressource (216 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9780226726380 9780226726106 |
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505 | 8 | |a Intro -- Contents -- Introduction -- Chapter One: What Is Doctrine? -- I. The Big Picture -- A. Artifacts -- B. Sources of Law -- C. Functions -- 1. Structuration -- 2. Defusing, Resolving, or Extinguishing Conflict -- 3. Correction -- 4. Realization of the Legal System -- 5. Reflexivity -- D. Legal Elements -- 1. Legal Persons -- 2. Entitlements and Disablements -- 3. Attribution Rules -- 4. Transfer Mechanisms -- 5. Interests/Harms -- 6. Remedies -- II. Doctrine -- A. The Characteristics of Doctrine -- B. The Structured Elasticity of Doctrine -- III. The Itinerary -- Chapter Two: Frames and Framing -- I. Entry-Framing -- II. Broad vs. Narrow Time Frames -- III. Segmented vs. Continuous Transactions -- IV. Action vs. Omission -- V. Level of Abstraction -- VI. The Theater Metaphor -- VII. Exit-Framing -- Chapter Three: Baselines -- I. Baseline Selection Problems -- A. Classic Baselines -- B. Variations within a Single Baseline -- 1. Level of Abstraction -- 2. Individualization -- 3. Multiplicity -- II. Baseline Neutrality Problems -- A. Failed Neutrality -- B. Denial and Evasion -- III. Baseline Collapse Problems -- IV. Summary -- Chapter Four: The Legal Distinction -- I. What Do Legal Distinctions Do? -- II. Three Criteria for "Sound" Legal Distinctions -- A. Conceptual Intelligibility -- B. Practicality -- C. Normative Appeal -- III. The Trade-Offs among the Three Criteria -- IV. The Classic Flaws and Why They Matter -- A. The Classic Flaws -- 1. Overbreadth -- 2. Underbreadth -- 3. Overlap -- 4. Discontinuity -- 5. False Dichotomy -- 6. Incoherence -- 7. Vagueness -- B. Why the Classic Flaws Matter: From Form to Substance -- 1. Waste -- 2. Fairness/Equality -- 3. Subversion -- 4. Efficiency -- 5. Rule of Law -- VI. Crafting Legal Distinctions -- VII. Where Do You Draw the Line? -- A. The Non-ideal World and the Inevitable Trade-Offs | |
505 | 8 | |a B. Arbitrariness -- C. Indivisibilities -- D. Dynamic Fields -- E. Problem Fields and Non-fields: Of Polycentricity and Flux -- F. The Slippery Slope -- VIII. The Fetishism of the Legal Distinction -- Chapter Five: Rules and Standards -- I. Defining Rules and Standards -- II. The Rules vs. Standards Dialectic -- A. Deterrence -- B. Delegation -- C. Communication/Formalities/Notice -- III. The Substantialized Versions of the Dialectic -- IV. The Limitations of the Dialectic -- A. Of Vices and Virtues -- B. The Polycentricity Challenge -- C. The Epistemological Twist -- V. The Irreducibility of the Dialectic -- Chapter Six: Resolving Regime Conflicts -- I. Techniques -- A. Hierarchy -- B. Sectorization -- C. Policy Judgments -- D. Balancing -- E. Meta-quantification Approaches -- F. Conflict Prevention Approaches -- G. Referral/Deference/Denial -- H. Channeling -- II. Putting It Together -- A. Hybrids -- B. Entailments -- C. Summary -- Chapter Seven: Interpretation -- I. The Interpretive Situation: Recurrent Tensions and Conflicts -- A. The "Legal" in the Legal Text -- B. The Interpretive Contexts -- 1. Fact-Rich -- 2. Institutionally Localized -- 3. Procedural Posture -- 4. Discernible Specific Consequences -- C. The Textual Feedback Loop -- D. The Plurality of Contexts -- 1. The Context of Application -- 2. The Authorial Context -- 3. The Addressee Context -- 4. The Functional Legal Context -- 5. Contexts Generally -- E. Fidelity to the Original Meaning -- F. Summary -- II. Textualism -- A. Individuation: What Is the Unit of Interpretation? -- B. Intratextual Integrity -- C. Intertextual Integrity -- III. Purposivism -- A. Multiple Purposes -- B. Selection -- C. The Structure of Purpose -- IV. Summary -- Chapter Eight: Cluster Logic -- I. A Cautionary Note -- II. The Structural Distinction Clusters -- III. How the Clusters Matter | |
505 | 8 | |a A. The Clusters as Classic Options -- B. Nuance: Substituting One Distinction or One Term for Another -- C. Cluster Functions -- 1. Function Tags for the Choice/Coercion Cluster -- 2. Function Tags for the Public/Private Cluster -- IV. Operationalizing the Clusters: Interaction -- A. Combining Clusters -- B. The Theatrical Metaphor -- V. The Logic of Dissociation -- A. Chaining: Running an Argument through Successive Clusters -- B. Cluster Alliances -- VI. Cluster Logic -- Coda: The Topics of Doctrine -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Index | |
650 | 4 | |a Law-Methodology | |
653 | 6 | |a Electronic books | |
700 | 1 | |a Griffin, Amy J. |e Sonstige |4 oth | |
776 | 0 | 8 | |i Erscheint auch als |n Druck-Ausgabe |a Schlag, Pierre |t How to Do Things with Legal Doctrine |d Chicago : University of Chicago Press,c2020 |z 9780226726106 |
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any_adam_object | |
author | Schlag, Pierre |
author_facet | Schlag, Pierre |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Schlag, Pierre |
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building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV048631419 |
collection | ZDB-30-PQE |
contents | Intro -- Contents -- Introduction -- Chapter One: What Is Doctrine? -- I. The Big Picture -- A. Artifacts -- B. Sources of Law -- C. Functions -- 1. Structuration -- 2. Defusing, Resolving, or Extinguishing Conflict -- 3. Correction -- 4. Realization of the Legal System -- 5. Reflexivity -- D. Legal Elements -- 1. Legal Persons -- 2. Entitlements and Disablements -- 3. Attribution Rules -- 4. Transfer Mechanisms -- 5. Interests/Harms -- 6. Remedies -- II. Doctrine -- A. The Characteristics of Doctrine -- B. The Structured Elasticity of Doctrine -- III. The Itinerary -- Chapter Two: Frames and Framing -- I. Entry-Framing -- II. Broad vs. Narrow Time Frames -- III. Segmented vs. Continuous Transactions -- IV. Action vs. Omission -- V. Level of Abstraction -- VI. The Theater Metaphor -- VII. Exit-Framing -- Chapter Three: Baselines -- I. Baseline Selection Problems -- A. Classic Baselines -- B. Variations within a Single Baseline -- 1. Level of Abstraction -- 2. Individualization -- 3. Multiplicity -- II. Baseline Neutrality Problems -- A. Failed Neutrality -- B. Denial and Evasion -- III. Baseline Collapse Problems -- IV. Summary -- Chapter Four: The Legal Distinction -- I. What Do Legal Distinctions Do? -- II. Three Criteria for "Sound" Legal Distinctions -- A. Conceptual Intelligibility -- B. Practicality -- C. Normative Appeal -- III. The Trade-Offs among the Three Criteria -- IV. The Classic Flaws and Why They Matter -- A. The Classic Flaws -- 1. Overbreadth -- 2. Underbreadth -- 3. Overlap -- 4. Discontinuity -- 5. False Dichotomy -- 6. Incoherence -- 7. Vagueness -- B. Why the Classic Flaws Matter: From Form to Substance -- 1. Waste -- 2. Fairness/Equality -- 3. Subversion -- 4. Efficiency -- 5. Rule of Law -- VI. Crafting Legal Distinctions -- VII. Where Do You Draw the Line? -- A. The Non-ideal World and the Inevitable Trade-Offs B. Arbitrariness -- C. Indivisibilities -- D. Dynamic Fields -- E. Problem Fields and Non-fields: Of Polycentricity and Flux -- F. The Slippery Slope -- VIII. The Fetishism of the Legal Distinction -- Chapter Five: Rules and Standards -- I. Defining Rules and Standards -- II. The Rules vs. Standards Dialectic -- A. Deterrence -- B. Delegation -- C. Communication/Formalities/Notice -- III. The Substantialized Versions of the Dialectic -- IV. The Limitations of the Dialectic -- A. Of Vices and Virtues -- B. The Polycentricity Challenge -- C. The Epistemological Twist -- V. The Irreducibility of the Dialectic -- Chapter Six: Resolving Regime Conflicts -- I. Techniques -- A. Hierarchy -- B. Sectorization -- C. Policy Judgments -- D. Balancing -- E. Meta-quantification Approaches -- F. Conflict Prevention Approaches -- G. Referral/Deference/Denial -- H. Channeling -- II. Putting It Together -- A. Hybrids -- B. Entailments -- C. Summary -- Chapter Seven: Interpretation -- I. The Interpretive Situation: Recurrent Tensions and Conflicts -- A. The "Legal" in the Legal Text -- B. The Interpretive Contexts -- 1. Fact-Rich -- 2. Institutionally Localized -- 3. Procedural Posture -- 4. Discernible Specific Consequences -- C. The Textual Feedback Loop -- D. The Plurality of Contexts -- 1. The Context of Application -- 2. The Authorial Context -- 3. The Addressee Context -- 4. The Functional Legal Context -- 5. Contexts Generally -- E. Fidelity to the Original Meaning -- F. Summary -- II. Textualism -- A. Individuation: What Is the Unit of Interpretation? -- B. Intratextual Integrity -- C. Intertextual Integrity -- III. Purposivism -- A. Multiple Purposes -- B. Selection -- C. The Structure of Purpose -- IV. Summary -- Chapter Eight: Cluster Logic -- I. A Cautionary Note -- II. The Structural Distinction Clusters -- III. How the Clusters Matter A. The Clusters as Classic Options -- B. Nuance: Substituting One Distinction or One Term for Another -- C. Cluster Functions -- 1. Function Tags for the Choice/Coercion Cluster -- 2. Function Tags for the Public/Private Cluster -- IV. Operationalizing the Clusters: Interaction -- A. Combining Clusters -- B. The Theatrical Metaphor -- V. The Logic of Dissociation -- A. Chaining: Running an Argument through Successive Clusters -- B. Cluster Alliances -- VI. Cluster Logic -- Coda: The Topics of Doctrine -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Index |
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spelling | Schlag, Pierre Verfasser aut How to Do Things with Legal Doctrine Chicago University of Chicago Press 2020 ©2020 1 Online-Ressource (216 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Intro -- Contents -- Introduction -- Chapter One: What Is Doctrine? -- I. The Big Picture -- A. Artifacts -- B. Sources of Law -- C. Functions -- 1. Structuration -- 2. Defusing, Resolving, or Extinguishing Conflict -- 3. Correction -- 4. Realization of the Legal System -- 5. Reflexivity -- D. Legal Elements -- 1. Legal Persons -- 2. Entitlements and Disablements -- 3. Attribution Rules -- 4. Transfer Mechanisms -- 5. Interests/Harms -- 6. Remedies -- II. Doctrine -- A. The Characteristics of Doctrine -- B. The Structured Elasticity of Doctrine -- III. The Itinerary -- Chapter Two: Frames and Framing -- I. Entry-Framing -- II. Broad vs. Narrow Time Frames -- III. Segmented vs. Continuous Transactions -- IV. Action vs. Omission -- V. Level of Abstraction -- VI. The Theater Metaphor -- VII. Exit-Framing -- Chapter Three: Baselines -- I. Baseline Selection Problems -- A. Classic Baselines -- B. Variations within a Single Baseline -- 1. Level of Abstraction -- 2. Individualization -- 3. Multiplicity -- II. Baseline Neutrality Problems -- A. Failed Neutrality -- B. Denial and Evasion -- III. Baseline Collapse Problems -- IV. Summary -- Chapter Four: The Legal Distinction -- I. What Do Legal Distinctions Do? -- II. Three Criteria for "Sound" Legal Distinctions -- A. Conceptual Intelligibility -- B. Practicality -- C. Normative Appeal -- III. The Trade-Offs among the Three Criteria -- IV. The Classic Flaws and Why They Matter -- A. The Classic Flaws -- 1. Overbreadth -- 2. Underbreadth -- 3. Overlap -- 4. Discontinuity -- 5. False Dichotomy -- 6. Incoherence -- 7. Vagueness -- B. Why the Classic Flaws Matter: From Form to Substance -- 1. Waste -- 2. Fairness/Equality -- 3. Subversion -- 4. Efficiency -- 5. Rule of Law -- VI. Crafting Legal Distinctions -- VII. Where Do You Draw the Line? -- A. The Non-ideal World and the Inevitable Trade-Offs B. Arbitrariness -- C. Indivisibilities -- D. Dynamic Fields -- E. Problem Fields and Non-fields: Of Polycentricity and Flux -- F. The Slippery Slope -- VIII. The Fetishism of the Legal Distinction -- Chapter Five: Rules and Standards -- I. Defining Rules and Standards -- II. The Rules vs. Standards Dialectic -- A. Deterrence -- B. Delegation -- C. Communication/Formalities/Notice -- III. The Substantialized Versions of the Dialectic -- IV. The Limitations of the Dialectic -- A. Of Vices and Virtues -- B. The Polycentricity Challenge -- C. The Epistemological Twist -- V. The Irreducibility of the Dialectic -- Chapter Six: Resolving Regime Conflicts -- I. Techniques -- A. Hierarchy -- B. Sectorization -- C. Policy Judgments -- D. Balancing -- E. Meta-quantification Approaches -- F. Conflict Prevention Approaches -- G. Referral/Deference/Denial -- H. Channeling -- II. Putting It Together -- A. Hybrids -- B. Entailments -- C. Summary -- Chapter Seven: Interpretation -- I. The Interpretive Situation: Recurrent Tensions and Conflicts -- A. The "Legal" in the Legal Text -- B. The Interpretive Contexts -- 1. Fact-Rich -- 2. Institutionally Localized -- 3. Procedural Posture -- 4. Discernible Specific Consequences -- C. The Textual Feedback Loop -- D. The Plurality of Contexts -- 1. The Context of Application -- 2. The Authorial Context -- 3. The Addressee Context -- 4. The Functional Legal Context -- 5. Contexts Generally -- E. Fidelity to the Original Meaning -- F. Summary -- II. Textualism -- A. Individuation: What Is the Unit of Interpretation? -- B. Intratextual Integrity -- C. Intertextual Integrity -- III. Purposivism -- A. Multiple Purposes -- B. Selection -- C. The Structure of Purpose -- IV. Summary -- Chapter Eight: Cluster Logic -- I. A Cautionary Note -- II. The Structural Distinction Clusters -- III. How the Clusters Matter A. The Clusters as Classic Options -- B. Nuance: Substituting One Distinction or One Term for Another -- C. Cluster Functions -- 1. Function Tags for the Choice/Coercion Cluster -- 2. Function Tags for the Public/Private Cluster -- IV. Operationalizing the Clusters: Interaction -- A. Combining Clusters -- B. The Theatrical Metaphor -- V. The Logic of Dissociation -- A. Chaining: Running an Argument through Successive Clusters -- B. Cluster Alliances -- VI. Cluster Logic -- Coda: The Topics of Doctrine -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Index Law-Methodology Electronic books Griffin, Amy J. Sonstige oth Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Schlag, Pierre How to Do Things with Legal Doctrine Chicago : University of Chicago Press,c2020 9780226726106 |
spellingShingle | Schlag, Pierre How to Do Things with Legal Doctrine Intro -- Contents -- Introduction -- Chapter One: What Is Doctrine? -- I. The Big Picture -- A. Artifacts -- B. Sources of Law -- C. Functions -- 1. Structuration -- 2. Defusing, Resolving, or Extinguishing Conflict -- 3. Correction -- 4. Realization of the Legal System -- 5. Reflexivity -- D. Legal Elements -- 1. Legal Persons -- 2. Entitlements and Disablements -- 3. Attribution Rules -- 4. Transfer Mechanisms -- 5. Interests/Harms -- 6. Remedies -- II. Doctrine -- A. The Characteristics of Doctrine -- B. The Structured Elasticity of Doctrine -- III. The Itinerary -- Chapter Two: Frames and Framing -- I. Entry-Framing -- II. Broad vs. Narrow Time Frames -- III. Segmented vs. Continuous Transactions -- IV. Action vs. Omission -- V. Level of Abstraction -- VI. The Theater Metaphor -- VII. Exit-Framing -- Chapter Three: Baselines -- I. Baseline Selection Problems -- A. Classic Baselines -- B. Variations within a Single Baseline -- 1. Level of Abstraction -- 2. Individualization -- 3. Multiplicity -- II. Baseline Neutrality Problems -- A. Failed Neutrality -- B. Denial and Evasion -- III. Baseline Collapse Problems -- IV. Summary -- Chapter Four: The Legal Distinction -- I. What Do Legal Distinctions Do? -- II. Three Criteria for "Sound" Legal Distinctions -- A. Conceptual Intelligibility -- B. Practicality -- C. Normative Appeal -- III. The Trade-Offs among the Three Criteria -- IV. The Classic Flaws and Why They Matter -- A. The Classic Flaws -- 1. Overbreadth -- 2. Underbreadth -- 3. Overlap -- 4. Discontinuity -- 5. False Dichotomy -- 6. Incoherence -- 7. Vagueness -- B. Why the Classic Flaws Matter: From Form to Substance -- 1. Waste -- 2. Fairness/Equality -- 3. Subversion -- 4. Efficiency -- 5. Rule of Law -- VI. Crafting Legal Distinctions -- VII. Where Do You Draw the Line? -- A. The Non-ideal World and the Inevitable Trade-Offs B. Arbitrariness -- C. Indivisibilities -- D. Dynamic Fields -- E. Problem Fields and Non-fields: Of Polycentricity and Flux -- F. The Slippery Slope -- VIII. The Fetishism of the Legal Distinction -- Chapter Five: Rules and Standards -- I. Defining Rules and Standards -- II. The Rules vs. Standards Dialectic -- A. Deterrence -- B. Delegation -- C. Communication/Formalities/Notice -- III. The Substantialized Versions of the Dialectic -- IV. The Limitations of the Dialectic -- A. Of Vices and Virtues -- B. The Polycentricity Challenge -- C. The Epistemological Twist -- V. The Irreducibility of the Dialectic -- Chapter Six: Resolving Regime Conflicts -- I. Techniques -- A. Hierarchy -- B. Sectorization -- C. Policy Judgments -- D. Balancing -- E. Meta-quantification Approaches -- F. Conflict Prevention Approaches -- G. Referral/Deference/Denial -- H. Channeling -- II. Putting It Together -- A. Hybrids -- B. Entailments -- C. Summary -- Chapter Seven: Interpretation -- I. The Interpretive Situation: Recurrent Tensions and Conflicts -- A. The "Legal" in the Legal Text -- B. The Interpretive Contexts -- 1. Fact-Rich -- 2. Institutionally Localized -- 3. Procedural Posture -- 4. Discernible Specific Consequences -- C. The Textual Feedback Loop -- D. The Plurality of Contexts -- 1. The Context of Application -- 2. The Authorial Context -- 3. The Addressee Context -- 4. The Functional Legal Context -- 5. Contexts Generally -- E. Fidelity to the Original Meaning -- F. Summary -- II. Textualism -- A. Individuation: What Is the Unit of Interpretation? -- B. Intratextual Integrity -- C. Intertextual Integrity -- III. Purposivism -- A. Multiple Purposes -- B. Selection -- C. The Structure of Purpose -- IV. Summary -- Chapter Eight: Cluster Logic -- I. A Cautionary Note -- II. The Structural Distinction Clusters -- III. How the Clusters Matter A. The Clusters as Classic Options -- B. Nuance: Substituting One Distinction or One Term for Another -- C. Cluster Functions -- 1. Function Tags for the Choice/Coercion Cluster -- 2. Function Tags for the Public/Private Cluster -- IV. Operationalizing the Clusters: Interaction -- A. Combining Clusters -- B. The Theatrical Metaphor -- V. The Logic of Dissociation -- A. Chaining: Running an Argument through Successive Clusters -- B. Cluster Alliances -- VI. Cluster Logic -- Coda: The Topics of Doctrine -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Index Law-Methodology |
title | How to Do Things with Legal Doctrine |
title_auth | How to Do Things with Legal Doctrine |
title_exact_search | How to Do Things with Legal Doctrine |
title_full | How to Do Things with Legal Doctrine |
title_fullStr | How to Do Things with Legal Doctrine |
title_full_unstemmed | How to Do Things with Legal Doctrine |
title_short | How to Do Things with Legal Doctrine |
title_sort | how to do things with legal doctrine |
topic | Law-Methodology |
topic_facet | Law-Methodology |
work_keys_str_mv | AT schlagpierre howtodothingswithlegaldoctrine AT griffinamyj howtodothingswithlegaldoctrine |