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Law as a means

This article defends legal instrumentalism, i.e. the thesis that law is distinguished among social institutions more by the means by which it serves its ends, than by the ends it serves. In Kelsen’s terms, ’[L]aw is a means, a specific social means, not an end.’ The defence is indirect. First, it is argued that the instrumentalist thesis is an interpretation of a broader view about law that is common ground among theorists as different as Aquinas and Bentham. Second, the following familiar fallacies that seem to stand in the way of accepting the thesis are refuted: (1) If law is an instrument, then law can have no non-instrumental value. (2) If law is an instrument, then law always has instrumental value. (3) For law to be an instrument, there must be generic end that law serves. (4) If law is an instrument, law must be a neutral instrument. These claims are all wrong. In passing, the instrumentalist thesis is distinguished from other, unrelated, views sometimes associated with instrumentalism, including Brian Tamanaha’s diagnosis of the vices of American law, and the views of those who think that jurisprudence is an instrument in the service of social ends

Grup de Recerca en Filosofia del Dret

Author: Green, Leslie
Date: 2009 December 14
Abstract: This article defends legal instrumentalism, i.e. the thesis that law is distinguished among social institutions more by the means by which it serves its ends, than by the ends it serves. In Kelsen’s terms, ’[L]aw is a means, a specific social means, not an end.’ The defence is indirect. First, it is argued that the instrumentalist thesis is an interpretation of a broader view about law that is common ground among theorists as different as Aquinas and Bentham. Second, the following familiar fallacies that seem to stand in the way of accepting the thesis are refuted: (1) If law is an instrument, then law can have no non-instrumental value. (2) If law is an instrument, then law always has instrumental value. (3) For law to be an instrument, there must be generic end that law serves. (4) If law is an instrument, law must be a neutral instrument. These claims are all wrong. In passing, the instrumentalist thesis is distinguished from other, unrelated, views sometimes associated with instrumentalism, including Brian Tamanaha’s diagnosis of the vices of American law, and the views of those who think that jurisprudence is an instrument in the service of social ends
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Citation: Green, L. (2009). Law as a means. A ’Primera trobada Oxford-Girona de Filosofia del Dret’. Girona: Universitat. [Consulta 25 gener 2010]. Disponible a: http://hdl.handle.net/10256.1/1470
Document access: http://hdl.handle.net/10256.1/1470
Language: eng
Publisher: Grup de Recerca en Filosofia del Dret
Collection: Primera trobada Oxford-Girona de Filosofia del Dret
Rights: Aquest document està subjecte a una llicència Creative Commons: Reconeixement - No comercial - Compartir igual (by-nc-sa)
Rights URI: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/es/deed.ca
Subject: Dret -- Filosofia -- Congressos
Law -- Philosophy -- Congresses
Title: Law as a means
Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/lecture
Repository: DUGiMedia

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