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Human Dignity and the Rule of Law

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journal contribution
posted on 2019-10-02, 14:52 authored by Stephen Riley
The rule of law denotes an expectation of non-arbitrary governance. It also invokes law’s distinctive characteristics: formality, institutional independence, and authority. Taken together with a basic conception of the person, the rule of law can be treated as ‘good governance consistent with human rationality or agency’ and is often associated with human dignity. On the view defended here human dignity in conjunction with the rule of law makes additional, specific, demands on legal systems, namely the reconciliation of the ‘normative holism’ of law (its regulatory reach) with permissive, ‘anthropological’, demands. This line of enquiry provides us with both a distinctive understanding of human dignity and an understanding of law that is normative but still closely related to the formal virtues implied by the rule of law.

Funding

This work is part of the research programme ‘Human Dignity as the Foundation of Human Rights’ which is financed by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO).

History

Citation

Utrecht Law Review, 2015, 11 (2), pp. 91-91

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/School of Law

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Utrecht Law Review

Publisher

Utrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Uopen Journals)

eissn

1871-515X

Copyright date

2015

Available date

2019-10-02

Publisher version

https://www.utrechtlawreview.org/articles/abstract/10.18352/ulr.320/

Language

en

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