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  1. Who Killed the Lawmaker?
    A Barthesian Analysis on Constitutional Interpretation

    The purpose of this paper is to show how interdisciplinary studies between the fields of law and literature can contribute to the debate on legal interpretation, and to the role of what legal operators actually do when deciding constitutional issues.... more

     

    The purpose of this paper is to show how interdisciplinary studies between the fields of law and literature can contribute to the debate on legal interpretation, and to the role of what legal operators actually do when deciding constitutional issues. First, we will review one of the possible meeting points between law and literature - i. e. law as literature - and we will examine Roland Barthes’ semiological proposal, specifically his theory about “The Death of the Author”; from there on, we will show how the ideas and concepts he coined constitute one of the tools that best describe the mechanics of the current constitutional interpretation in some legal systems. This will lead to what we will call “The Death of the Lawmaker”.

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Online
    Other identifier:
    Parent title:
    Enthalten in: Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie; Stuttgart : Franz Steiner Verlag, [1933]-; 108, Heft 2 (2022), 270-287; Online-Ressource
    Other subjects: law and literature; law as literature; Roland Barthes; death of the author; death of the lawmaker; constitutional interpretation; Recht und Literatur; Recht als Literatur; Roland Barthes; Tod des Autors; Tod des Gesetzgebers; Verfassungs-Interpretation; ARSP 2022; 270
    Scope: Online-Ressource
  2. Can a River be Considered a Legal Person?
    Investigating the Possibility for the Atrato River
    Author: Göksu, Rana

    The focus of this study is an examination of what it means to be a legal person and the role that the law plays in bestowing the legal status of being a person. This study highlights the underpinning rationalities and human interest that establish a... more

     

    The focus of this study is an examination of what it means to be a legal person and the role that the law plays in bestowing the legal status of being a person. This study highlights the underpinning rationalities and human interest that establish a hierarchy between person, defined as “human”, at a superior level to everything else, defined as “nonhuman”. In this respect, there is a core notion concerning human exceptionalism based on the rational sovereignty that justifies and consolidates the mastery of nature. To understand the fundamental premises of legal personhood, it begins from the first usage of person in history and philosophy, since the concept of legal personhood has been established through historical and philosophical developments. Analysing the meaning of person through different conceptualisations can allow a deeper insight into the legal interpretation of personhood. As a result of such investigation, two main dualistic structures of legal personhood reveal: the person-property dualism and the human being-person dualism. Thus, legal personhood simultaneously includes personalisation and depersonalisation, and always operates in a hierarchical array. Although the division between persons and things in the concept of personhood is rigid, being a “person” or a “thing” is open to interpretation in different circumstances through legal practices of exclusion and inclusion. Recently, there have been an increasing number of court rulings and a tendency of legislation to recognise the legal personhood of natural entities as a legal way of conserving the environment. This leads to an interpretation that legal recognition is a matter of institutional interest and attempts. Nevertheless, legal practitioners mostly prefer to confer certain rights or the status of a legal person on nature without the consideration of legal personhood’s background as seen in the case discussed in this study - the Tierra Digna case in Colombia. While this study endeavours to demonstrate the anthropocentric standard view of legal personhood, its principal purpose is to indicate the malleable nature of legal personhood as a product of legal fiction. In this context, this study aims to conclude that law’s imaginary nature should be used for producing a new legal reasoning and for offering a real paradigm shift that is congruent with the plasticity of and the fluidity of nature.

     

    Export to reference management software   RIS file
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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: French
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Online
    Other identifier:
    Parent title:
    Enthalten in: Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie; Stuttgart : Franz Steiner Verlag, [1933]-; 108, Heft 1 (2022), 82-107; Online-Ressource
    Other subjects: legal personhood; human exceptionalism; Tierra Digna Case; nature; legal fiction; critical legal theory; rechtliche Persönlichkeit; menschlicher Ausnahmezustand; Tierra Digna Fall; Natur; rechtliche Fiktion; kritische Rechtstheorie; ARSP 2022; 82
    Scope: Online-Ressource
  3. Who Killed the Lawmaker?
    A Barthesian Analysis on Constitutional Interpretation

    The purpose of this paper is to show how interdisciplinary studies between the fields of law and literature can contribute to the debate on legal interpretation, and to the role of what legal operators actually do when deciding constitutional issues.... more

     

    The purpose of this paper is to show how interdisciplinary studies between the fields of law and literature can contribute to the debate on legal interpretation, and to the role of what legal operators actually do when deciding constitutional issues. First, we will review one of the possible meeting points between law and literature - i. e. law as literature - and we will examine Roland Barthes’ semiological proposal, specifically his theory about “The Death of the Author”; from there on, we will show how the ideas and concepts he coined constitute one of the tools that best describe the mechanics of the current constitutional interpretation in some legal systems. This will lead to what we will call “The Death of the Lawmaker”.

     

    Export to reference management software   RIS file
      BibTeX file
    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Article (journal)
    Format: Online
    Other identifier:
    Parent title:
    Enthalten in: Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie; Stuttgart : Franz Steiner Verlag, [1933]-; 108, Heft 2 (2022), 270-287; Online-Ressource
    Other subjects: law and literature; law as literature; Roland Barthes; death of the author; death of the lawmaker; constitutional interpretation; Recht und Literatur; Recht als Literatur; Roland Barthes; Tod des Autors; Tod des Gesetzgebers; Verfassungs-Interpretation; ARSP 2022; 270
    Scope: Online-Ressource