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Journal ArticleDOI

Taking Rights Seriously

Alan R. White, +1 more
- 01 Oct 1977 - 
- Vol. 27, Iss: 109, pp 379
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TLDR
In this paper, a judge in some representative American jurisdiction is assumed to accept the main uncontroversial constitutive and regulative rules of the law in his jurisdiction and to follow earlier decisions of their court or higher courts whose rationale, as l
Abstract
1.. HARD CASES 5. Legal Rights A. Legislation . . . We might therefore do well to consider how a philosophical judge might develop, in appropriate cases, theories of what legislative purpose and legal principles require. We shall find that he would construct these theories in the same manner as a philosophical referee would construct the character of a game. I have invented, for this purpose, a lawyer of superhuman skill, learning, patience and acumen, whom I shall call Hercules. I suppose that Hercules is a judge in some representative American jurisdiction. I assume that he accepts the main uncontroversial constitutive and regulative rules of the law in his jurisdiction. He accepts, that is, that statutes have the general power to create and extinguish legal rights, and that judges have the general duty to follow earlier decisions of their court or higher courts whose rationale, as l

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Journal ArticleDOI

Reconhecimento de direitos de pessoas trans: alternativas, políticas e ativismo teórico-judicial

TL;DR: In this paper, a reivindicação não pode ser confundida with a criação of “novos” direitos.
Dissertation

Ativismo-cooperativo na produção de provas : garantia de igualdade das partes no processo civil

TL;DR: In this article, a bibliographical study of the attitude of a judge in the civil court of Vila Velha, Brazil, is presented, showing that the justice in the process depends on the judges' active and cooperative posture, taking care of equality of the parties and the celerity of the procedure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Street-level bureaucrats and coping mechanisms.The unexpected role of Italian judges in Asylum policy implementation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the black box of the asylum determination process, focusing on asylum adjudication in courts and on actors implementing this specific policy frame: asylum judges.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rawlsian Justice and the Ayers Settlement

TL;DR: In 2004, a nearly 30-year legal battle over higher education desegregation in Mississippi was settled with the state's historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) to receive US$503 million from the federal government as discussed by the authors.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Quality of Government

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the concept of quality of government should be best understood as that of having impartial government institutions, which avoids functionalism and ignores the contents of specific policies in favor of the procedures for how they are implemented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Building on the Foundation of General Strain Theory: Specifying the Types of Strain Most Likely to Lead to Crime and Delinquency:

TL;DR: In this article, the characteristics of strainful events and conditions that influence their relationship to crime are described, and it is predicted that some types of strain will not be related to crime, including types that have dominated the research on strain theory.
Book ChapterDOI

Value Sensitive Design and Information Systems

TL;DR: Value sensitive design as discussed by the authors is a theoretically grounded approach to the design of technology that accounts for human values in a principled and comprehensive manner throughout the design process, which employs an integrative and iterative tripartite methodology, consisting of conceptual, empirical, and technical investigations.
Journal ArticleDOI

What is Legal Pluralism

TL;DR: In this article, what is legal pluralism? The Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law: Vol. 18, No. 24, pp. 1-55.
Journal ArticleDOI

What Is Quality of Government? A Theory of Impartial Government Institutions

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a more coherent and specific definition of QoG: the impartiality of institutions that exercise government authority, which they relate to a series of criticisms stemming from the fields of public administration, public choice, multiculturalism, and feminism.