Shared Authority
Courts and Legislatures in Legal Theory
Dimitrios Kyritsis
This new book advances a fresh philosophical account
of the relationship between the legislature and courts, opposing the common
conception of law, in which it is legislatures that primarily create the law,
and courts that primarily apply it. This conception has eclectic affinities
with legal positivism, and although it may have been a helpful intellectual
tool in the past, it now increasingly generates more problems than it solves.
For this reason, the author argues, legal philosophers are better off abandoning
it. At the same time they are asked to dismantle the philosophical and
doctrinal infrastructure that has been based on it and which has been hitherto
largely unquestioned. The book offers an alternative framework for
understanding the role of courts and the legislature; a framework which is
distinctly anti-positivist and which builds on Ronald Dworkin's interpretive
theory of law. But, contrary to Dworkin, it insists that legal duty is
sensitive to the position one occupies in the project of governing; legal
interpretation is not the solitary task of one super-judge, but a collaborative
task structured by principles of institutional morality such as separation of
powers which impose a moral duty on participants to respect each other's
contributions. Moreover this collaborative task will often involve citizens
taking an active role in their interaction with the law.