1st Edition

Human Dignity and Law Legal and Philosophical Investigations

By Stephen Riley Copyright 2018
    232 Pages
    by Routledge

    232 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book argues that human dignity and law stand in a privileged relationship with one another.  Law must be understood as limited by the demands made by human dignity.  Conversely, human dignity cannot be properly understood without clarifying its interaction with legal institutions and legal practices.  This is not, then, a survey of the uses of human dignity in law; it is a rethinking of human dignity in relation to our principles of social governance.  The result is a revisionist account of human dignity and law, one focused less on the use of human dignity in our regulations and more on its constitutive implications for the governance of the public realm.

    The first part conducts a wide-ranging moral, legal and political analysis of the nature and functions of human dignity.  The second part applies that analysis to three fields of legal regulation: international law, transnational law, and domestic public law.

    The book will appeal to scholars in both philosophy and law.  It will also be of interest to political theorists, particularly those working within the liberal tradition or those concerned with institutional design.





      Table of Contents





      Preface



      Acknowledgements



      Introduction



      Outline





      Part I





      Chapter 1 Human Dignity and Law











      Chapter 2 Human Dignity as Status





      Chapter 3 Human Dignity, Justice, and Institutions





      Part II





      Chapter 4 International Law





      Chapter 5 Transnational Law





      Chapter 6 Public Law



       



      Biography

      Dr Stephen Riley is a lecturer in the Law School of the University of Leicester, UK.  He has previously worked as a postdoctoral researcher in philosophy at Utrecht University.