14 results on '"history of public law"'
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2. Towards a history of Public Law in Argentina (XIX-XX centuries): traditions, knowledge, concepts
- Author
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Casagrande, Agustín Elías
- Subjects
Derecho público ,Legal history ,Derecho ,Tradición ,Constitucionalismo ,Public Law ,Historia jurídica ,Constitutionalism ,State ,Estado ,Tradition - Abstract
Este ensayo reflexiona sobre la historia del derecho público, con particularidad a partir de los modos en los cuales la misma fue tradicionalmente pensada dentro del discurso dogmático jurídico en la Argentina. En ese sentido, se intentan explicar algunas condicionantes conceptuales con respecto al Estado y al estatalismo que configuraron un particular habitus intelectual de los juristas con respecto al uso de la historia. A partir de allí, se tratan de explicar algunas tensiones con respecto a la separación del derecho público y el privado como parte estructurante del proyecto jurídico de la Modernidad. Asimismo, se observan los usos dogmáticos del pasado que efectúa el derecho constitucional y su historia con respecto a un derecho público más abarcado. Finalmente, se intenta exhibir la existencia de tradiciones encontradas en las disciplinas que conforman el derecho público con respecto al constitucionalismo liberal clásico. A partir del análisis histórico-conceptual de dichas disciplinas, se intenta explicar la ausencia de una historia del derecho público y las potencialidades que la misma posee para comprender las tensiones que en la actualidad producen tradiciones con historias y principios no asimilables entre sí., This essay attempts to reflect on the history of public law, particularly, from the ways in which it was traditionally thought of within legal dogmatic discourse in Argentina. In that sense, this writing tries to explain some conceptual conditioners with respect to the State and the statism that configure a particular intellectual habitus of jurists with respect to the use of history. From this point of departure, this intellectual exercise intends to explain some tensions regarding the separation of public and private law as structuring part of the legal project of modernity. Likewise, the dogmatic uses of the past that the constitutional law and its history make with respect to a more encompassed public law are observed. Finally, it tries to show the existence of historical conflicting traditions between the disciplines that constitute public law with respect to classical liberal constitutionalism. From the historical-conceptual analysis of these disciplines, which exhibits the agonic character of their discourses, we try to explain the absence of a history of public law and the potential that it has to understand the tensions that currently produce traditions with histories and principles that cannot be assimilated to each other., Facultad de Ciencias Jurídicas y Sociales
- Published
- 2018
3. A History of Public Law in Germany, 1914-1945
- Author
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Jeffrey Seitzer
- Subjects
History ,Public law ,Law ,Political science ,Common law ,Civil law (legal system) ,Chinese law ,Comparative law ,Legal history ,Israeli law - Published
- 2007
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4. Book Review: A History of Public Law in Germany 1914-1945
- Author
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Eli Nathans
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,History ,Public law ,Law ,Political science ,Civil law (legal system) ,Comparative law - Published
- 2007
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5. Michael Stolleis, A History of Public Law in Germany 1914–1945, trans. Thomas Dunlop, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004. Pp. 504. £70 ($165) (ISBN 0-19-926936-X)
- Author
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Peter L. Lindseth
- Subjects
History ,Public law ,Philosophy ,Media studies ,Law ,Humanities - Published
- 2007
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6. MICHAEL STOLLEIS. A History of Public Law in Germany, 1914-1945. Translated by THOMAS DUNLAP. New York: Oxford University Press. 2004. Pp. xiv, 489
- Author
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Dieter Gosewinkel
- Subjects
Archeology ,History ,Public law ,Museology ,Media studies ,Classics - Published
- 2006
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7. Crisis, Reform and the Way Forward in Greece
- Author
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Calliope Spanou
- Subjects
Public law ,Shock (economics) ,Politics ,Product market ,business.industry ,Political science ,Political economy ,Public sector ,Agency (sociology) ,Conditionality ,business ,Nexus (standard) - Abstract
This volume discusses different aspects of Greece's political economy during the past decade and reflects on the country's path ahead, examining the major question: did this challenging period succeed in providing a window of opportunity for deeper institutional and societal change? The authors seek to contribute to the discussion of the dynamics of stability and change, of the nexus between external pressure and domestic agency. Greece offers a most interesting case study, as much in analytical as in empirical terms. Never before did a euro area member require three macroeconomic adjustment programmes under stringent policy conditionality and external supervision. This experience shattered past certainties and reshaped the political landscape. A decade later Greece was starting to recover and received international recognition for its reform efforts. However, the COVID-19 pandemic provided an external shock that risks derailing such achievements. The volume includes chapters by academics and researchers from different professional backgrounds: history, economics, public law, political science, public administration and political economy. Their diverse experience and viewpoints contribute to multidimensional analyses in subject areas such as Greece's constitutional structure, public sector reforms, labour market developments, China's expanding investment footprint and product market reforms. © 2022 selection and editorial matter, Calliope Spanou. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2021
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8. Lietuvos viešosios teisės iki XVIII a. pabaigos istorijos tyrimų būklė ir perspektyvos
- Author
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Jevgenijus Machovenko
- Subjects
History ,Teisės istorija / History of law ,lcsh:Law ,Public law, history ,Lithuanian ,Sociological theory of law ,Private law, history ,language.human_language ,Teisės mokslas / Legal science ,Public law ,Viešoji teisė ,Lietuva (Lithuania) ,Law ,language ,Theology ,Privatinė teisė ,lcsh:K - Abstract
Straipsnyje nagrinėjami LDK viešosios teisės istorijos tyrimų metodologiniai pagrindai, aptariama LDK viešosios teisės istorijos tyrimų spragos ir jų šalinimo perspektyvos, kaip alternatyva tradicinei LDK teisės vientisumo doktrinai pateikiama pliuralistinė tos teisės vizija. In the article methodological bases of research of history of public law of Lithuania to the end of 18th century are examined, problems of study of history of public law and methods of solution are discussed. As the alternative of that existing doctrine is proposed the pluralistic concept of Lithuanian public law – in the same territory there were many alternative systems, each of which had their public and private law. The first level of studies is a study of law of individual corporations and associations. The second level is comparative analysis of these laws for the purpose of obtaining general signs. The third level is further generalization for the purpose of obtaining a general characteristic of Lithuanian public law to the end of the 18th century. The sociological theory of law must become methodological basis of these studies. Research must be carried out in the context of history of the Western legal tradition. It must widely be used the methods of comparative jurisprudence. The history of public law can be considered as the sequential change of three types of the law – ancient (existed in Lithuania to 1387), medieval (1387–1918) and modern (since 1918).
- Published
- 2011
9. The Law: Libya, Syria, ISIS, and the Case against the Energetic Executive
- Author
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Chris Edelson and Donna G. Starr-Deelen
- Subjects
History ,National security ,Public Administration ,Sociology and Political Science ,Presidential system ,Constitution ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Doctrine ,Legislation ,Legislature ,Plenary power ,Public law ,Political science ,Law ,business ,media_common - Abstract
The Flawed Energetic Executive Model In the late summer of 2013, President Barack Obama seemed poised to order U.S. military action against Syria without congressional authorization. Obama "apparently [felt] the need to follow through on his threat" to use military force against the Assad regime if it used chemical weapons in the Syrian civil war (Cole 2013). However, following criticism from more than 150 legislators who insisted that congressional authorization was constitutionally required, President Obama changed course and asked Congress to authorize military action in Syria. John Yoo argued that the president's decision to seek congressional authorization was a mistake (Yoo 2013). In Yoo's view, President Obama had constitutional authority to act without congressional approval. (1) Yoo claimed that "the Framers did not lodge the war power solely with Congress ... [because] [legislatures are slow--Congress will not vote on the [Syria] authorization until the second week of September ... They [members of Congress] do not act with unity, secrecy, and speed" (Yoo 2013). Yoo worried that, because Obama had chosen not to act promptly and unilaterally, "[i]t seems likely that [Bashar al-] Assad will learn everything he needs to know about our tactics, strategy, and political will from a lengthy legislative debate" (Yoo 2013). As it turned out, however, Congress never voted on legislation to authorize the use of military force against Syria, and the United States did not take military action against the Assad regime. (2) After President Obama asked Congress for approval, the crisis was resolved through diplomacy when Russia brokered a deal that would eliminate Syria's chemical weapons arsenal (Walsh and Labott 2013). Yoo's concern that Obama had made a mistake by asking Congress to weigh in on the question of using military force against the Assad regime was based on a misconceived and constitutionally illegitimate energetic executive model of presidential power. By the energetic executive model, we mean the claim that Alexander Hamilton believed it was necessary to vest war power in one person, the president, who could order the military to act quickly and decisively in the name of national security. Yoo and other proponents of this energetic executive model are misreading both Hamilton's writings and the Constitution itself. When Hamilton spoke of energy in the executive, he did not mean that the president had plenary power over the use of military force, and even if Hamilton had meant this, the Constitution clearly rejects concentration of war power in the hands of the president. The energetic executive model is similar to the baseless sole organ doctrine of exclusive presidential control over foreign affairs (Fisher 2007). Each creates an illusion of legitimacy that depends on taking remarks by prominent figures in the history of public law (Hamilton for the energetic executive, John Marshall for the sole organ doctrine) wholly out of context to support a vision of presidential power that neither man intended and the Constitution expressly rejects. Both the energetic executive and sole organ theories seek to claim legitimacy through seemingly authoritative sources--for the energetic executive, an Office of the Legal Counsel (OLC) memorandum, and for the sole organ, dicta in a Supreme Court opinion (United States v. Curtiss-Wright Export Corp. 1936; Yoo 2001). But, on closer examination, these seemingly authoritative precedents are based on misreadings of the primary sources. Like the sole organ doctrine, the energetic executive model needs to be debunked and exposed as a fallacy. The energetic executive model associated with Yoo and other advocates of plenary executive power fails, both as a matter of law and of policy. It fails as a matter of law because, as Hamilton himself recognized, the Constitution squarely rejects unilateral presidential military action outside of the limited context of an emergency defensive response to a sudden attack (Adler 2010, 537; Fisher 2013, 8; Kassop 2015, 164). …
- Published
- 2015
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10. Justice Imperiled: The Anti-Nazi Lawyer Max Hirschberg in Weimar Germany (review)
- Author
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Benjamin Carter Hett
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,History ,Weimar Republic ,Bildungsbürgertum ,Jurisprudence ,Religious studies ,Nazism ,Politics ,Public law ,Law ,Sociology ,Legal profession ,Hirschberg test - Abstract
Justice Imperiled: The Anti-Nazi Lawyer Max Hirschberg in Weimar Germany, by Douglas G. Morris. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2005. 443. pp. $35.00. Douglas G. Morris, very much like his subject, the Weimar-era German lawyer Max Hirschberg, is a practicing big-city criminal defense lawyer with a significant sideline as a scholar. His somewhar unusual background contributes to the success of this study of a lawyer ar work and helps make this carefully researched and lucidly written book a very valuable addition to our knowledge of law and the administration of justice in the Weimar Republic. This knowledge remains surprisingly patchy. We know a lot about the jurisprudential dispures of the 1920s and early 1930s, as a wide range of legal scholars, philosophers, and historians on both sides of the Atlantic continue to be fascinated with Weimar constitutionalism, and with the profound disputes about the fundamental nature of law for which the Republic's troubled politics created especially fertile ground (See inter alia Michael Stolleis, A History of Public Law in Germany 1914-1945, trans. Thomas Dunlop [2004J; Peter C. Caldwell, Popular Sovereignty and the Crisis of German Constitutional Law: TIk TIKory and Practice of Weimar Constitutionalism [1997]; Arthur J. Jacobson and Bernhard Schlink, eds., Weimar: A Jurisprudence of Crisis [2000]); Manfred Gangl, ed., Linke Juristen in der Weimarer Republik [2003]). We know a little about the practical politics of law and the legal profession in Weimar (Kenneth F. Ledford, From General Estate to Special Interest: German Lawyers 1878-1933 [1996]; Robert Kuhn, Die Vertrauenskrise der Justiz [1926-1928]: Der Kampf um die Republikanisierung der Rechtspflege in der Weimarer Republik [1983]; Tilmann Krach, Judische Rechtsanwalte in Preusen: Uber die Bedeutung der freien Advokatur und ihre Zerstorung durch den Nationalsozialismus [1991]). But of the actual conduct of criminal trials, even the overtly political, let alone the unpolitical, we know very little; and despite the colorful personalities and contemporary fame of many members of the Weimar bar, biographies of lawyers are few, and good ones even fewer. Thus a scholarly biography of an important lawyer which pays careful attention to the hows and whys of his cases fills a major gap. Hirschberg was born in Munich in 1883 and grew up a rather characteristic product of the Imperial German Bildungsburgertum, idealistic, cultivated, and perhaps naive in equal measures. Hirschberg was never especially religious, and Morris suggests that Hirschberg's Jewish background was important only in contributing to a sense of separateness that he carried throughout his life (p. 19) - and, of course, in providing one ground for his flight from Germany after the Nazis came to power. Hirschberg opened a legal practice in Munich in 191 11 but as Morris shows, it was the First World War, in which Hirschberg served as a front line officer, and even more the revolutionary turbulence of post-war Munich, that shaped his political outlook (social democratic) and gave him a sense of political mission. After flirting with a formal political career, Hirschberg decided that he could most effectively contribute to a democratic Germany through his legal practice. …
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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11. Administrative Law Theory and Administrative Doctrine
- Author
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Michael Stolleis
- Subjects
Public law ,Administrative law ,Law ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Political science ,Doctrine ,media_common - Published
- 2004
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12. Administrative Law and International Law
- Author
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Michael Stolleis
- Subjects
Public law ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Law ,Administrative law ,Political science ,Common law ,Commercial law ,Private law ,medicine ,Comparative law ,Municipal law ,Civil law (common law) - Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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13. Memory and Practice: Politics and the Representation of the Past in Eighteenth-Century France
- Author
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Keith Michael Baker
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,History ,Sociology and Political Science ,Michel foucault ,General Arts and Humanities ,Representation (arts) ,Possession (law) ,Gender Studies ,Politics ,Public law ,Sovereignty ,Dynamism ,Social science ,Control (linguistics) ,Classics - Abstract
M E M O RY," MICHEL FOUCAULT has argued, "is actually a very important factor in struggle... . If one controls people's memory, one controls their dynamism.... It is vital to have possession of this memory, to control it, administer it, tell it what it must contain."' Recognition of this relationship between memory and political practice was by no means absent in France at the end of the Old Regime. Indeed, it was explained to Louis XVI on his accession-and with disarming simplicity-by one of the crown's most enlightened and innovative ministers, Henri Bertin. "The history and public law of a nation are based on the records," Bertin instructed his sovereign
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- 1985
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14. American Constitutional History and the New Legal History: Complementary Themes in Two Modes
- Author
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Harry N. Scheiber
- Subjects
History ,Constitution ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Context (language use) ,Legal history ,History of ideas ,Public law ,Scholarship ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Law ,Political history ,Theme (narrative) ,media_common - Abstract
The approaching bicentennial of the Constitution promises to stimulate interest in scholarship on the history of American law. This prospect coincides with what many practitioners of constitutional history consider to be a genuine crisis in their field-a crisis that recently inspired the program committee of a major scholarly organization to feature the theme "Is Constitutional History Dead?" in preparing its annual meeting.' The essence of the field's problem, as many contend, is that scholarly interest in the traditional core of constitutional history-the doctrines and behavior of courts-has been overshadowed during the last two decades by a distinctly different mode of investigation, one that is often termed the "new legal history." My contention is that, while some troubles do beset the field of constitutional history, there is little reason to proclaim or even seriously debate the "death" of that field. The new legal history, taking the whole legal system as its province and stressing the interactions of change in law with socioeconomic developments, offers perspectives on American history in many vital respects different from the perspectives of constitutional history; yet the two approaches are necessarily complementary both in their logical structures and in their evidentiary bases. Only by integrating their concerns can the full context and significance of change in American legal history be understood. Harry N. Scheiber is professor of law at the University of California, Berkeley. He acknowledges with thanks research support provided by a humanities fellowship of the Rockefeller Foundation. 'This pessimistic session title was adopted by the American Society for Legal History program committee in the planning for the fall 1980 annual meeting. When the final program was prepared, however, the more cautious title "The Crisis in American Constitutional History and Public Law" was adopted. No creation of a straw man was intended; the validity of each title was seriously debated. As to rising interest in constitutional history vis-A-vis the bicentennial: Project '87 has pursued a program of research fellowships and public and scholarly conferences; an encyclopedia of the Constitution, funded by National Endowment for the Humanities, has been announced under the editorship of Leonard W. Levy and Kenneth Karst; and the American Historical Associa
- Published
- 1981
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