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Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, Volume 20, Issue 4, pp. 499-532: Abstract.
Common Law of Human Rights?: Transnational Judicial Conversations on
Constitutional Rights
CHRISTOPHER McCRUDDEN
Professor of Human Rights Law, Oxford University
It is now commonplace in many jurisdictions for judges to refer to the
decisions of the courts of foreign jurisdictions when interpreting domestic
human rights guarantees. But there has also been a persistent undercurrent of
scepticism about this trend, and the emergence of a growing debate about its
appropriateness. This issue is of particular relevance in jurisdictions that
have relatively recently incorporated human rights provisions that are
significantly judicially enforced. In the UK, a reconsideration of the use of
comparative judicial decisions in human rights cases is therefore particularly
timely. The interpretation of the Human Rights Act 1998 will bring with it the
issue of how far British courts will (and/or should) use jurisprudence from
other countries in order to help in arriving at decisions on the interpretation
of the Act. This article raises for debate, therefore, the meaning and
significance of national judges» citation of judgments from other
jurisdictions as part of their reasoning in cases with a significant human (or
constitutional) rights aspect. Several questions are identified and explored in
an attempt to consider various aspects of the general phenomenon. These include
empirical questions (how far does it happen, and where?), jurisprudential
questions (can we identify criteria that help explain why it does or does not
happen?), and normative questions (is it legitimate?). A review of the existing
literature is undertaken with a view to determining how far scholars have
succeeded in answering these questions. The article concludes that significant
gaps exist in our understanding of the phenomenon and raises for discussion the
methodologies that may be appropriate for addressing the phenomenon in the
future.
Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, Volume 20, Issue 4, pp.
579-596: Abstract.
Law and Content-Independent Reasons
P MARKWICK
Department of Moral Philosophy, University of St Andrews
Say a reason to ø is legal just in case at least a part of the
reason is the fact that ø-ing is legally required. This paper is
about the widely accepted claim that legal reasons have a certain distinctive
formal property-content-independence. I argue that, on two important
interpretations, this claim is false. It is false either because legal reasons
contingently lack the relevant property or because no reason lacks it. I also
argue that, given these two interpretations, content-independence could not be
a property of singular legal reasons.
Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, Volume 20, Issue 3, pp. 367-390: Abstract.
Designing Default Rules in Contract Law: Consent, Conventionalism, and
Efficiency
C A RILEY
University of 'Newcastle upon Tyne
This article considers the principles that ought to be used to determine the
scope and content of contract law's «default rules», the
rules that will, in the absence of express exclusion, govern parties»
contractual relationships. It examines three, ostensibly competing, approaches
discussed in the literature: that defaults be grounded in the subjective
consent of contracting parties, in the customs and norms immanent within the
parties» community, and in the value of economic efficiency. It
argues that each has something of value to tell us about default rules, but
that none can, in isolation, offer a wholly compelling prescription for their
design. Rather, the best such prescription must be an eclectic one, drawing
something from all three accounts, but varying to reflect the institution
promulgating the default. Where defaults are promulgated legislatively, the
case for choosing rules that will promote efficiency is a strong one, and the
main criticism of efficiency analysis is shown, in this particular context, to
be misguided. Where, however, defaults are promulgated adjudicatively-in the
context of settling individual cases-the normative appeal of efficiency is much
reduced. The article, then, criticizes efficient adjudicative defaults against
their defenders, whilst defending efficient legislative defaults against their
critics.