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Law

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Lady Justice or Justitia is a personification of the moral force that underlies the legal system. Her blindfold symbolises equality under the law through impartiality towards its subjects, the weighing scales represent the balancing of people's interests under the law, and her sword denotes the law's force of reason.

Law[1] is a system of rules usually enforced through a set of institutions.[2] It affects politics, economics and society in numerous ways. Contract law regulates everything from buying a bus ticket to trading swaptions on a derivatives market. Property law defines rights and obligations related to transfer and title of personal and real property, for instance, in mortgaging or renting a home. Trust law applies to assets held for investment and financial security, such as pension funds. Tort law allows claims for compensation when someone or their property is injured or harmed. If the harm is criminalised in a penal code, criminal law offers means by which the state prosecutes and punishes the perpetrator. Constitutional law provides a framework for creating laws, protecting people's human rights, and electing political representatives. Administrative law relates to the activities of administrative agencies of government. International law regulates affairs between sovereign nation-states in everything from trade to the environment to military action. "The rule of law", wrote the ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle in 350 BC, "is better than the rule of any individual."[3]

Legal systems around the world elaborate legal rights and responsibilities in different ways. A basic distinction is made between civil law jurisdictions and systems using common law. Some countries persist in basing their law on religious texts. Scholars investigate the nature of law through many perspectives, including legal history and philosophy, or social sciences such as economics and sociology. The study of law raises important questions about equality, fairness and justice, which are not always simple. "In its majestic equality", said the author Anatole France in 1894, "the law forbids rich and poor alike to sleep under bridges, beg in the streets and steal loaves of bread."[4] The most important institutions for law are the judiciary, the legislature, the executive, its bureaucracy, the military and police, the legal profession and civil society.

Contents

Legal subjects

Though all legal systems must deal with similar issues, different countries often categorise and name legal subjects in different ways. Quite common is the distinction between "public law" subjects, which relate closely to the state (including constitutional, administrative and criminal law), and "private law" subjects (including contract, tort and property).[5] In civil law systems, contract and tort fall under a general law of obligations and trusts law is dealt with under statutory regimes or international conventions. International, constitutional and administrative law, criminal law, contract, tort, property law and trusts are regarded as the "traditional core subjects",[6] although there are many further disciplines which might be of greater practical importance.

International law

Image:Naciones Unidas 3.jpg
Providing a constitution for public international law, the United Nations was conceived during World War II.

In a global economy, law is globalising too. International law can refer to three things: public international law, private international law or conflict of laws and the law of supranational organisations.

  • ^ Glenn, Legal Traditions of the World, 86
  • ^ Kelly, A Short History of Western Legal Theory, 5–6
  • ^ Ober, The Nature of Athenian Democracy, 121
  • ^ Kelly, A Short History of Western Legal Theory, 39
  • ^ As a legal system, Roman law has affected the development of law in most of Western civilisation as well as in parts of the Eastern world. It also forms the basis for the law codes of most countries of continental Europe ( "Roman law". Encyclopaedia Britannica. ).
  • ^ Sealey-Hooley, Commercial Law, 14
  • ^ For discussion of the composition and dating of these sources, see Olivelle, Manu's Code of Law (Oxford, 2005), 18-25.
  • ^ Glenn, Legal Traditions of the World, 276
  • ^ Glenn, Legal Traditions of the World, 273
  • ^ Glenn, Legal Traditions of the World, 287
  • ^ Glenn, Legal Traditions of the World, 304
  • ^ Glenn, Legal Traditions of the World, 305
  • ^ Glenn, Legal Traditions of the World, 307
  • ^ Glenn, Legal Traditions of the World, 309
  • ^ Farah, Five Years of China WTO Membership, 263–304
  • ^ Rousseau, The Social Contract, Book II: Chapter 6 (Law)
  • ^ Bix, John Austin
  • ^ Kant, Immanuel, Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals, 42 (par. 434)
  • ^ Green, Legal Positivism
  • ^ Kazantzakis, Friedrich Nietzsche and the Philosophy of Law, 97–98
  • Linarelli, Nietzsche in Law's Cathedral, 23–26
  • ^ Nietzsche, Zur Genealogie der Moral, Second Essay, 11
  • ^ Marmor, The Pure Theory of Law
  • ^ Bielefeldt, Carl Schmitt's Critique of Liberalism, 25–26
  • ^ Finn, Constitutions in Crisis, 170–171
  • ^ Bayles, Hart's Legal Philosophy, 21
  • ^ Dworkin, Law's Empire, 410
  • ^ Raz, The Authority of Law, 3–36
  • ^ Raz, The Authority of Law, 37 etc.
  • ^ The Becker-Posner Blog. Retrieved on 2007-02-03.
  • ^ S.M. Jakoby, Economic Ideas and the Labour Market, 53
  • ^ Coase, The Nature of the Firm, 386–405
  • ^ Coase, The Problem of Social Coast, 1–44
  • ^ Sturges v. Bridgman (1879) 11 Ch D 852
  • ^ Coase, The Problem of Social Cost, IV, 7
  • ^ Coase, The Problem of Social Cost, V, 9
  • ^ Coase, The Problem of Social Cost, VIII, 23
  • ^ Jary, Collins Dictionary of Sociology, 636
  • ^ Rottleuthner, La Sociologie du Droit en Allemagne, 109
  • Rottleuthner, Rechtstheoritische Probleme der Sociologie des Rechts, 521
  • ^ Rheinstein, Max Weber on Law and Economy in Society, 336
  • ^ Jary, Collins Dictionary of Sociology, 636
  • ^ Johnson, The Blackwell Dictionary of Sociology, 156
  • ^ Gurvitch, Sociology of Law, 142
  • Papachristou, Sociology of Law, 81–82
  • Olson, The New Parliaments of Central and Eastern Europe, 7
  • Weber, The Theory of Social and Economic Organisation, 154
  • ^ Albrow, Bureaucracy, 16
  • ^ Mises, Bureaucracy, II, Bureaucratic Management
  • ^ a b Kettl, Public Bureaucracies, 367
  • ^ Weber, Economy and Society, I, 393
  • ^ Kettl, Public Bureaucracies, 371
  • ^ The Sunday Times v. The United Kingdom [1979] ECHR 1 at 49 Case no. 6538/74
  • ^ Locke, Second Treatise, Chapter 7, section 87
  • ^ Hegel, Elements of the Philosophy of Right, 3, II, 182
  • ^ Pelczynski, The State and Civil Society, 1–13
  • ^ Robertson, Crimes Against Humanity, 98–99


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