01688 2200265 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020001500097041000800112082001200120084001800132100002100150245005300171250001100224260003300235300003100268500002000299504001600319520098200335650003201317650002201349990002501371990002601396INLIS00000000000251420231219093805 a0010-0520002514231219 | | eng  a0631154957 aeng a340.115 a340.115/SAM/d0 aCharles Sampford1 aThe Disorder Of Law : A Critique Of Legal Theory aCet. 1 aNew York :bBlackwell,c1989 ax,283p.;22.5 cm ;c22.5 cm aIndeks : Indeks aBibliografi aThe belief that the law forms a legal system is only given real content and prominence by juriprudential theory. So, unsurprisingly, it is to jurisprudential theory that we must turn in order to find any theoretical justification for the widespread view of law as a system. Certainly such theoretical justification are not in short supply. Most writers use the word 'system' freely and describe law in what can clearly be recognized as systematic terms (see chapter1.3). Indeed most theories of law are centred on one of three kinds of legal system (source-based, content-based or function-based). Altough there is almost universal agreement that law forms a system, the kind of system it forms is hotly debated. Each major school of jurisprudential thought offers a different theory of legal system, usually inocompatible whit other theories, which are vigorously critized by their proponents. Indeed there appears to be a shifting majority against each and every type system. 4a-Sociological Jurisprudence 4a-Legal Positivism a05804/MKRI-P/IX-2008 a27308/MKRI-P/XII-2023