GENERAL JURISPRUDENCE

Authors

  • William Twining University College London

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.30827/acfs.v39i0.1039

Abstract

This paper sets out a view of a General Jurisprudence that is needed to underpin the institutionalised discipline of law as it becomes more cosmopolitan in the context of “globalisation”, and considers its implications.

Part I restates a position on the mission and nature of the discipline of law and of the role of jurisprudence, as its theoretical part, in contributing to the health of the discipline. Part II clarifies some questions that have been raised about this conception of General Jurisprudence: (i) the implications of “globalisation”; (ii) The meaning of “General Jurisprudence” in this context; (iii) The relationship between Jurisprudence, Legal Philosophy, and social scientific approaches to law; and (iv) The significance of the idea of “non-state law”. Part III illustrates through concrete examples some implications for possible agendas and issues suggested by this model within the areas roughly characterised as analytical, normative, empirical, and critical jurisprudence, including critical analysis of the assumptions and presuppositions typically underpinning mainstream work in fields such ascomparative law, public international law, religious law, and socio-legal studies.

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Published

2005-12-12

How to Cite

Twining, W. (2005). GENERAL JURISPRUDENCE. Anales De La Cátedra Francisco Suárez, 39, 597–688. https://doi.org/10.30827/acfs.v39i0.1039