Cosmopolitan citizenship and pathologies of pluralism


Autoria(s): JANDA, Richard
Data(s)

19/04/2013

19/04/2013

01/06/2010

Resumo

There are two interconnected questions obscured in the contemporary discourse of legal pluralism. The first concerns the legitimacy of the various forms of pluralism. The second concerns their pathology. If we accept that law does not issue from a unitary source, the problem becomes to characterize the kinds of pluralism in which we find ourselves and to discern their principles of legitimacy. It cannot be taken for granted that they are all legitimate, that is to say, that they can both articulate and fulfill founding principles of justification. That leads to the second question. To celebrate all legal pluralism simply by drawing attention to it as anobservable, documented fact, without considering whether that pluralism conduces to the just and the good, is like speaking of the pluralism of the body’s mechanisms without asking whether any given complex of cells is malignant or benign.

Identificador

1480-1787

http://hdl.handle.net/1866/9420

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Centre de recherche en droit public (CRDP)

Relação

Lex Electronica; Vol.15, no 1

Direitos

© copyright 2009-2014 Lex Electronica. Tous droits réservés. Toutes demandes de reproduction doivent être acheminées à Copibec (reproduction papier).

Tipo

Article