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Private law theory and taxonomy: reframing the debate

Type de ressource
Auteurs/contributeurs
Titre
Private law theory and taxonomy: reframing the debate
Résumé
The aim of this paper is to reframe the taxonomy debate which has, in recent years, come to dominate private law theory. We argue that the debate to date has been flawed by two fundamental mistakes. First, little attention has been paid to how legal taxonomies are actually used. This, we argue, is regrettable: how we build a taxonomy depends on why we build a taxonomy, and a clearer focus on this question produces an approach that is very different from the approaches that currently dominate private law theory. Secondly, both sides in the debate have misunderstood what legal concepts are, and hence tend to misuse them. We argue that legal concepts are Weberian ideal types, and use philosophical theories of concepts to put forward a very different understanding of how concepts acquire content and are used in the legal system. Putting these together, we argue for a far more developmental, and historically informed, approach to taxonomy and to legal concepts generally.
Publication
The Journal of the Society of Legal Scholars
Volume
35
Numéro
3
Pages
480–501
Date
2015
Langue
Anglais
Titre abrégé
Private law theory and taxonomy: reframing the debate
Archive
Wiley Online Library
Loc. dans l'archive
a2275520
Catalogue de bibl.
Bibliothèque de l'Université Laval
Référence
Sheehan, D. et Arvind, T. T. (2015). Private law theory and taxonomy: reframing the debate. The Journal of the Society of Legal Scholars, 35(3), 480‑501. http://ariane25.bibl.ulaval.ca/ariane/wicket/detail?c=ariane&m=S&rq.ct=PE&rq.fa=false&rq.r.esc=false&rq.r.l%5B0%5D.c=PER&rq.r.l%5B0%5D.ex=false&rq.r.l%5B0%5D.op=AND&rq.r.l%5B0%5D.v=the+journal+of+the+society+of+legal+scholars&rq.r.la=*&rq.r.loc=*&rq.r.pft=true&rq.r.ta=*&rq.r.td=*&rq.rows=3&rq.st=1