The Oxford Handbook of Jurisprudence and Philosophy of Law
Edited by Jules Coleman and Scott J. Shapiro
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
1. Introduction
II. Jurisprudence
2. Natural Law: The Classical Theory, John Finnis
3. Natural Law Theory: The Modern Tradition, Brian Bix
4. Exclusive Legal Positivism, Andrei Marmor
5. Inclusive Legal Positivism, Ken Himma
6. Methodology, Jules Coleman
7. The Relationship Between Legal and Political Philosophy, Jeremy Waldron
8. Authority, Scott Shapiro
9. Rights, Frances Kamm
10. Reasons, Reasoning, Reasonableness, John Gardner and Timothy Macklem
11. Legal Formalism: The Task of Judgement, Martin Stone
12. Law and Obligation, Leslie Green
13. Adjudication, William Lucy
14. Statutory and Constitutional Interpretation, Ken Greenawalt
III. Philosophy and Law
15. Law and Language, Timothy A. O. Endicott
16. Law and Objectivity, Brian Leiter
17. Sexual Orientation and the Law: A Critique of Two Arguments for Lesbian and Gay Rights, Edward Stein
IV. Philosophy of Law
18. Responsibility, Christopher Kutz
19. Torts, Arthur Ripstein
20. The Methodological Commitments of Contemporary Contract Theory, Jody Kraus
21. ThePhilosophy of Criminal Law, Larry Alexander
22. The Idea of Property in Private Law, Peter Benson
23. The Philosophy of International Law, Allen Buchanan and David Golove
24. The Philosophy of the Common Law, Gerald Postema
25. Private Rights of Action, Civil Recourse, and Private Law, Benjamin C. Zipursky