Sanctions: An Essential Element of Law?
Frederick Schauer editor Christoph Bezemek editor Nicoletta Bersier editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Springer International Publishing AG
Published:28th May '25
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The volume is dedicated to the concept of sanctions and to the reassessment of its interrelation with the concept of law. It does not seem that long ago that “law” and “sanctions” were thought of as necessarily interrelated. “Every Law is a command”, we read in Austin’s ‘Province of Jurisprudence Determined’; a particular command, however, in “that the party to whom it is directed is liable to evil from the other, in case he [does not] comply”. And “[t]he evil which will probably be incurred in case a command be disobeyed […] is frequently called a sanction”. H. L. A. Hart’s critique of Austin’s “command theory of law” successfully drove a wedge into the interrelation of “law and “sanctions”; so successful, in fact, that it caused some scholars to part with the idea of “force” underlying the concept of law altogether and others to emphatically protest what they perceived as a rash move to discard one of the core elements of law. The debate still is on.
ISBN: 9783031885112
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
175 pages