A short history of legal validity and invalidity : foundations of private and public law / Maris Köpcke.
2019
K260 .K67 2019 (Mapit)
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Title
A short history of legal validity and invalidity : foundations of private and public law / Maris Köpcke.
Imprint
Cambridge, United Kingdom : Intersentia Ltd, [2019]
Copyright
©2019
Description
xiii, 158 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Formatted Contents Note
Introduction
Our technique of legal validity
Roman private law : rowing against the tide
Roman law-making : power usurped
Gratian's Decretum (mid-12th) : a novel use
The Decretals (mid-13th) : the terminology settles
Bartolus (mid-14th) : from a world state to a world of states
Suarez (early 17th) : inherent legal power
Codes and constitutions (19th onwards) : the tables are turned
Concluson.
Our technique of legal validity
Roman private law : rowing against the tide
Roman law-making : power usurped
Gratian's Decretum (mid-12th) : a novel use
The Decretals (mid-13th) : the terminology settles
Bartolus (mid-14th) : from a world state to a world of states
Suarez (early 17th) : inherent legal power
Codes and constitutions (19th onwards) : the tables are turned
Concluson.
Summary
The twin ideas of legal validity and invalidity are ubiquitous in contemporary private and public law. But their roots lie buried deep in European legal culture. This book for the first time traces and reveals these roots. In the course of a 2000-year journey through landmark texts of the Western tradition, from Roman law to modern codification and constitutionalism, the book shows that, contrary to what is often assumed, validity and invalidity originated in the domain of private transactions and only gradually came to be deployed in the domain of official power and law-making. This went hand in hand with legal thought's acknowledgement that law-making itself can be (in)valid, because legally limited, most recently by a body of constitutionally enshrined human rights. Understanding why, not only when, the technique of validity appeared, teaches valuable lessons about the kinds of social and political transformation that this technique can help realise - particularly in our age of emerging legal orders, shifting forms of governance, and fresh challenges to the regulation of exchanges in a digitally scripted world.
Note
The twin ideas of legal validity and invalidity are ubiquitous in contemporary private and public law. But their roots lie buried deep in European legal culture. This book for the first time traces and reveals these roots. In the course of a 2000-year journey through landmark texts of the Western tradition, from Roman law to modern codification and constitutionalism, the book shows that, contrary to what is often assumed, validity and invalidity originated in the domain of private transactions and only gradually came to be deployed in the domain of official power and law-making. This went hand in hand with legal thought's acknowledgement that law-making itself can be (in)valid, because legally limited, most recently by a body of constitutionally enshrined human rights. Understanding why, not only when, the technique of validity appeared, teaches valuable lessons about the kinds of social and political transformation that this technique can help realise - particularly in our age of emerging legal orders, shifting forms of governance, and fresh challenges to the regulation of exchanges in a digitally scripted world.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 147-151) and index.
Call Number
K260 .K67 2019
Language
English
ISBN
9781780688152 paperback
1780688156 paperback
1780688156 paperback
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