Hart Publishing has noted
that Kristen Rundle’s Forms Liberate: Reclaiming
the Jurisprudence of Lon L Fuller won
the Second Prize in the Society of Legal Scholars Birks Prize for Outstanding
Legal Scholarship 2012:
Lon L Fuller's account of what he termed 'the internal
morality of law' is widely accepted as the classic twentieth century statement
of the principles of the rule of law. Much less accepted is his claim that a
necessary connection between law and morality manifests in these principles,
with the result that his jurisprudence largely continues to occupy a marginal
place in the field of legal philosophy.
In Forms Liberate: Reclaiming the Jurisprudence of
Lon L Fuller, Kristen Rundle offers a close textual analysis of Fuller's
published writings and working papers to explain how his claims about the
internal morality of law belong to a wider exploration of the ways in which the
distinctive form of law introduces meaningful limits to lawgiving power through
its connection to human agency. By reading Fuller on his own terms, Forms
Liberate demonstrates why his challenge to a purely instrumental conception
of law remains salient for twenty-first century legal scholarship.
Other recent Hart publications include:
Ruth Herz, The Art of Justice: The Judge's Perspective:
This book presents a unique and intriguing collection
of drawings of courtroom scenes. Entering the courtroom wearing his robe, Judge
Pierre Cavellat literally had a secret up his sleeve. Hidden in it were pens
and pencils, which he used to sketch the scenes he observed from his bench.
Throughout a 40-year judicial career in one of France's more important regional
appellate courts, Cavellat produced hundreds of illuminating drawings and
paintings depicting the court proceedings but also the main actors: the
prosecutors, defence counsel, his fellow judges, the defendants, witnesses,
policemen, the general public, as well as the courtroom itself and its
architecture. The resulting vivid and uncensored impressions give an
unprecedented insight into how a judge perceives his profession and the
institution of justice as a whole. Given the scarcity of written
autobiographies by judges, and their reluctance to lay bare their inner
feelings and thinking, the images reveal, in a candid and immediate fashion,
the deeply hidden emotions, ambiguities and fantasies of a judge going about
his work. The author, a judge herself, interprets the images through the lens
of her own judicial experience, exploring how judges think and act and how
their thinking is constructed through their education, professional training,
gender and class. In doing so she exposes how personal background, history and
experience play an additional, sometimes conflicting, role in 'judgecraft'.
While relevant to both practitioners and students of law this book should also
appeal to the wider public.
Helmut Satzger, International and European Criminal Law:
This work highlights the international aspects of
criminal law so far ingrained in national law. The book is designed to give a
first and solid introduction to international criminal law, using numerous
examples and references to schemas and charts. It also caters for the needs of
students and academics in this field.
Christian J Tams and
Antonios Tzanakopoulos (eds),The
Settlement of International Disputes: Basic Documents:
This collection of documents brings together a large
number of primary sources on the peaceful settlement of disputes in a usable
and affordable format. The documents included reflect the diverse techniques of
international dispute settlement, as recognised in Articles 2(3) and 33 of the
UN Charter, such as negotiation, mediation, arbitration and adjudication. The
book comprises the most relevant multilateral treaties establishing dispute
settlement regimes, as well as examples of special agreements, compromissory
clauses, optional clause declarations and relevant resolutions of international
organisations. It covers both diplomatic and adjudicative methods of dispute
settlement and follows a basic division between general dispute settlement
mechanisms, and sectoral regimes in fields such as human rights, WTO law,
investment, law of the sea, environmental law and arms control. The book is the
first widely-available collection of key documents on dispute settlement. It is
aimed at teachers, students and practitioners of international law and related
disciplines.
Patrick Wautelet, Thalia Kruger and Govert Coppens
(eds), The Practice of Arbitration: Essays
in Honour of Hans van Houtte:
This book offers a series of commentaries on
noteworthy arbitral awards and court decisions on arbitration. All
contributions focus on the practice of arbitration. Influential authors with
proven arbitration experience share their insights on celebrated and less
well-known cases, drawn from various countries, various arbitration
institutions and including both commercial and investment arbitration.
This collection of essays celebrates the work and
scholarship of Hans van Houtte, who has been a professor of international
commercial arbitration at the University
of Leuven for more than
20 years. In addition to his widely -praised contribution to the theory of
arbitration, Professor Van Houtte has built a long career in the practice of
arbitration, presiding over a vast array of arbitral tribunals and holding
appointments to international tribunals, most recently as president of the
Iran-US Claims Tribunal.
Hans van Houtte has always been concerned with the
practical usefulness of scholarly writings, and this book respects this
approach.
This volume will prove essential for all arbitration
practitioners and will also be of great interest also to academics and research
students with an interest in international arbitration.
Ariel Ezrachi, EU Competition
Law: An Analytical Guide to the Leading Cases:
This book is the third edition of the highly practical
guide to the leading cases of European Competition Law. It focuses primarily on
Article 101 TFEU, Article 102 TFEU and the European Merger Regulation. In
addition it explores the public and private enforcement of Competition Law, the
intersection between Intellectual Property Rights and Competition Law and the
application of Competition Law to State action. Each chapter outlines the
relevant laws, regulations and guidelines for each of the topics. Within this
framework, cases are reviewed in summary form, accompanied by analysis and
commentary.
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