This book fundamentally reshapes philosophy of law by making central to its inquiry legality and the rule of law, constitutional theory, political theory, international law, the social contract, and legitimacy. It also shows the way in which the legal theories of Thomas Hobbes and Hans Kelsen enrich current debates.
Explores how the central question of philosophy of law is the legal subject's: how can that be law for me?
'How the social fact of power is transformed into the normative relationship of authority is a genuine and deep puzzle in the philosophy of law. Dyzenhaus traces how legal positivists, starting with Hobbes, have attended to the way in which the law maintains a relationship of mutual respect and accountability between ruler and subject. His provocative claim is that 'long arc of legality' from Hobbes through Kelsen to Hart reveals the ways in which legal positivists have subtly incorporated insights from their major critics - the natural lawyers - to answer the question of how law can have legitimate authority for its subjects. Through careful analysis of their contributions, he develops a distinctive account of the authority of law, capable of answering the question, 'But, how can that be law for me?'' W. Bradley Wendel, Edwin H. Woodruff Professor of Law, Cornell Law School