The Volokh Conspiracy
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The Official Story of the Law
(available as forthcoming from the Oxford Journal of Legal Studies)
We have a new article, The Official Story of the Law, forthcoming in one of the top peer-reviewed legal philosophy journals, the Oxford Journal of Legal Studies. Here is the abstract:
A legal system's 'official story' is its shared account of the law's structure and sources, which members of its legal community publicly advance and defend. In some societies, however, officials pay lip service to this shared account, while privately adhering to their own unofficial story instead. If the officials enforce some novel legal code while claiming fidelity to older doctrines, then which set of rules—if either—is the law? We defend the legal relevance of the official story, on largely Hartian grounds. Hart saw legal rules as determined by social rules accepted by a particular community. We argue that this acceptance requires no genuine normative commitment; agreement or compliance with the rules might even be feigned. And this community need not be limited to an official class, but includes all who jointly accept the rules. Having rejected these artificial limits, one can take the official story at its word.
We hope that this is both a contribution in analytic jurisprudence and in constitutional law.
As a matter of analytic jurisprudence, the piece makes two arguments furthering the basic insights of H.L.A. Hart -- exploring what it is to "accept" legal rules, and the kind of community who must do the accepting. (In this vein, among other things, the piece responds to and builds on previous work in the OJLS by Mikolaj Barczentowicz and Adam Perry.)
As a matter of constitutional law, our argument responds to a recurring question about how to think about "our law" of constitutional interpretation. Suppose one thinks that judges systematically invoke one set of considerations in their official legal reasoning, while being motivated behind the scenes by something else. (For instance, one might think that courts publicly reason in terms consistent with original law originalism, while actually trying to promote some set of non-legal policy goals.) The Official Story explains why the rules of our legal system are evidenced by the former rather than the latter.
You should be able to download the piece in open-access on the OJLS website. We also have put it on SSRN.
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Judging from the paucity of comments on this post, your article may not have attracted a lot of clicks. Maybe give the post a different title, such as
“Ten ways Trump furthers the basic legal insights of H. L. A. Hart, Number 7 will shock you!”
IANAL but am interested in the history of law. I had high hopes from the title, but the first few sentences set off alarm bells, and the entire excerpt here makes me think I am not the intended audience 🙂
Very good, Azilia.
It's not a conspiracy. It's just how things work.
The Supreme Court is a form of super-legislature, an unelected one, but one which follows from constitutional self rule.
The justices rule as they see fit. That process consists mostly of ideology, with a bit of tradition.
The liberal side might give the slightest feint toward a literal interpretation of the constitution, but then they pick a leftist advancing ruling.
The conservative side gives a slightly more dramatic feint toward a literal interpretation, then they pick a conservative advancing ruling.
What matters is the score, not the constitution itself.
No. the Constititution is what all positive law and SCOTUS must answer to. NOthing legislative at all.Unless you are one of those who call Thomas "conservative" but Ketanji "Black"
And logically you are saying you are neither Left nor Right and no one will believe that !!!
No. the Constititution is what all positive law and SCOTUS must answer to.
The Constitution has no voice, let alone an army. Some might see it as a deity who must be answered to, but that's an individual construct not binding on anyone else.
This happens often in Education -- the legislature passes a law (eg curriculum) which the profession ignores, so they pass another law, which is also ignored...