Search for: "Martin Krygier" Results 1 - 9 of 9
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19 Jan 2016, 7:20 am
Martin Krygier, University of New South Wales Faculty of Law, is publishing Magna Carta and the Rule of Law Tradition in Department of the Australian Senate Papers on Parliament Series. [read post]
14 Feb 2011, 4:30 am by Martin Krygier
Martin Krygier Many thinkers have combined a high regard for the rule of law with a negative view of it. [read post]
24 Jul 2017, 3:30 am by Martin Krygier
Martin Krygier Foucault and Rights is intriguing and impressive at two levels: one exegetic; the other political. [read post]
21 Jan 2015, 1:25 am by Antonio Zuccaro
Martin Krygier (University of New South Wales)The Many Uses of Law: Connecting an Instrumental and an Interactional Perspective. [read post]
8 Jul 2014, 9:30 pm by Karen Tani
"—Martin Krygier, University of New South Wales, Australia"Combining theory and case law, linguistics and jurisprudence, Our Word is Our Bond provides a uniquely sophisticated and dramatically accessible guide to the rhetoric of justice and the politics of judgment. [read post]
28 Jun 2017, 12:15 pm by Lawrence Solum
 Here is the abstract: This is the final chapter in a collection of essays on Pluralist Jurisprudence, in which the editors engage with the contributions from Roger Cotterrell, Maksymilian Del Mar, Cormac Mac Amhlaigh, Ralf Michaels, Sanne Taekema, Joseph Raz, Detlef von Daniels, Stefan Sciaraffa, Neil Walker, Margaret Davies, Kirsten Anker and Martin Krygier; consider the different pursuits that can be associated with a pluralist jurisprudence; reflect on how these different… [read post]
16 Dec 2011, 5:27 am by Lawrence Solum
Professor Hirschl was chosen as the winner from a most impressive field by a committee that consisted of Justice Mahoney, Professor Gillian Triggs (Dean and Challis Professor of International Law, Sydney Law School), Professor Martin Krygier (Gordon Samuels Professor of Law and Social Theory, University of New South Wales), Professor Wojciech Sadurski (Challis Chair in Jurisprudence, Sydney Law School) and Dr Kevin Walton (Director of the Julius Stone Institute of Jurisprudence). [read post]
30 May 2018, 3:30 am by Brian Tamanaha
, Detlef von Daniels (A Genealogical Perspective on Pluralist Jurisprudence), Stefan Sciaraffa (Two Conceptions of Pluralist Jurisprudence), Neil Walker (The Gap Between Global Law and Global Justice), Margaret Davies (Plural Pluralities of Law), Kirsten Anker (Postcolonial Jurisprudence and the Pluralist Turn), and Martin Krygier (Legal Pluralism and the Value of the Rule of Law). [read post]
15 Nov 2021, 3:30 am by Gilberto Morbach
His account of democracy is that of a constitution — a set of institutions by which power is constituted, exercised, constrained, and tempered, as Martin Krygier would put it — to be valued — and recognised as such — for its respect for deeper principles of political morality (not just instrumentally) and for the environment it upholds: an environment of reciprocity between citizens as co-members of a polity. [read post]