Radbruch’s Formula revisited: The ‘Lex Injusta Non Est Lex’ Maxim in constitutional democracies
According to German legal philosopher Gustav Radbruch, laws that are substantively unjust to an intolerable degree should not be regarded as legally valid, even if they were promulgated according to stipulated procedure. Radbruch’s Formula (as his position has been termed) contradicts the central te...
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sg-smu-ink.sol_research-57662022-02-15T08:56:09Z Radbruch’s Formula revisited: The ‘Lex Injusta Non Est Lex’ Maxim in constitutional democracies TAN, Seow Hon According to German legal philosopher Gustav Radbruch, laws that are substantively unjust to an intolerable degree should not be regarded as legally valid, even if they were promulgated according to stipulated procedure. Radbruch’s Formula (as his position has been termed) contradicts the central tenet of legal positivism, according to which the existence of laws does not necessarily depend on their merit. While some legal positivists suppose that legal invalidity based on the content of particular laws is a central tenet of natural law theory, natural law theorists such as John Finnis opine that the lex injusta non est lex maxim has been no more than a subordinate theorem of classical natural law theory. In Finnis’s view, unjust laws give rise to legal obligation “in a legal sense.” 2021-08-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/3808 info:doi/10.1017/cjlj.2021.12 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/5766/viewcontent/RADBRUCH_s_FORMULA_REVISITED_av.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Yong Pung How School Of Law eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University unjust laws natural law theory Radbruch constitutional democracy legal validity subsidiarity Constitutional Law Jurisprudence |
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unjust laws natural law theory Radbruch constitutional democracy legal validity subsidiarity Constitutional Law Jurisprudence TAN, Seow Hon Radbruch’s Formula revisited: The ‘Lex Injusta Non Est Lex’ Maxim in constitutional democracies |
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According to German legal philosopher Gustav Radbruch, laws that are substantively unjust to an intolerable degree should not be regarded as legally valid, even if they were promulgated according to stipulated procedure. Radbruch’s Formula (as his position has been termed) contradicts the central tenet of legal positivism, according to which the existence of laws does not necessarily depend on their merit. While some legal positivists suppose that legal invalidity based on the content of particular laws is a central tenet of natural law theory, natural law theorists such as John Finnis opine that the lex injusta non est lex maxim has been no more than a subordinate theorem of classical natural law theory. In Finnis’s view, unjust laws give rise to legal obligation “in a legal sense.” |
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TAN, Seow Hon |
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TAN, Seow Hon |
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TAN, Seow Hon |
title |
Radbruch’s Formula revisited: The ‘Lex Injusta Non Est Lex’ Maxim in constitutional democracies |
title_short |
Radbruch’s Formula revisited: The ‘Lex Injusta Non Est Lex’ Maxim in constitutional democracies |
title_full |
Radbruch’s Formula revisited: The ‘Lex Injusta Non Est Lex’ Maxim in constitutional democracies |
title_fullStr |
Radbruch’s Formula revisited: The ‘Lex Injusta Non Est Lex’ Maxim in constitutional democracies |
title_full_unstemmed |
Radbruch’s Formula revisited: The ‘Lex Injusta Non Est Lex’ Maxim in constitutional democracies |
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radbruch’s formula revisited: the ‘lex injusta non est lex’ maxim in constitutional democracies |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2021 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/3808 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/sol_research/article/5766/viewcontent/RADBRUCH_s_FORMULA_REVISITED_av.pdf |
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