01770 2200265 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020002400097041000800121082001000129084001400139100005100153245007700204250001100281260004300292300003600335500002000371520098300391650002401374650003501398700002301433990002401456990002401480INLIS00000000000585920221020103223 a0010-0520005859221020 | | eng  a0 - 7546 - 2061 - 1 aeng a320.1 a320.1 JUD0 aJudicial Power, Democracy And Legal Positivism1 aJudicial Power, Democracy And Legal Positivism /cEdited by Tom Campbell acet.1. aEngland :bDartmouth Publishing,c2000 aXIII, 431 hlm. ; 24 cm ;c24 cm aIndeks : Indeks aThis collection of essays by a group of leading legal philosophers from the UK, the USA and Australasia centres on the juridification of politics through enhancing the entrenched power of judges. The issues are examined in the context of a critique of the revival of legal positivism as a prescriptive political philosophy closely tied to the tradition of parliamentary democracy. The papers, which include significant new contributions by Jeremy Waldron, Frederick Schauer, Neil MacCormick and Nicola Lacey, originated in an extended workshop held at The Australian National University in 1998 on 'Judicial Activism and Judicial Review in Australian Democracy'. Some of the essays focus on the recent Australian developments with respect to implied constitutional rights and others concentrate on Tom Campbell's legal theory of 'ethical positivism'. The book as a whole presents powerful and conflicting arguments bearing on the global debate about the changing role of judges. 4a1. Legal Positivism 4a2.Judicial Review - Philosophy0 aJeffrey Goldswothy a05055/MKRI-P/I-2007 a05055/MKRI-P/I-2007