University of Virginia Legal Working Paper Series
University of Virginia Public Law and Legal Theory Working Paper Series
Was Austin Right After All?: On the Role of Sanctions in a Theory of Law
Article comments
forthcoming: Ratio Juris, vol. 23 (2009)
Abstract
In modern jurisprudence it is taken as axiomatic that John Austin’s sanction-based account of law and legal obligation demolished in H.L.A. Hart’s The Concept of Law, but Hart’s victory and the deficiencies of the Austinian account may not be so clear. Not only does the alleged linguistic distinction between being obliged and having an obligation fail to provide as much support for the idea of a sanction-independent legal obligation as is commonly thought, but the soundness of Hart’s claims, as well as the claims of many legal theorists who have followed him, depend on a contested view of the nature of legal theory. If the task of a theory of law, as Joseph Raz and others have influentially argued, is to identify the essential features of the concept of law, then the theoretical possibility, if not the empirical reality, of a sanction-free legal system is what is most important. But if the task of a theory of law is to provide philosophical and theoretical illumination of law as it exists and as it is experienced, then a theory of law that fails to give a central place to law’s coercive reality may for that reason be deficient as a theory of law. The question of the soundness of the Austinian account, therefore, may be a function of the answer to the question of what a theory of law is designed to accomplish.
Subject Area
Public Law and Legal Theory
Recommended Citation
Frederick Schauer,
"Was Austin Right After All?: On the Role of Sanctions in a Theory of Law"
(June 2009).
University of Virginia Legal Working Paper Series.
University of Virginia Public Law and Legal Theory Working Paper Series.
Working Paper 128.
http://law.bepress.com/uvalwps/uva_publiclaw/art128
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