How to Write a Positivist Legal History: Lessons from the 18th and 19th Centuries English Jurists William Blackstone and James Fitzjames Stephen

IF 0.4 0 ARCHITECTURE
Susanna Menis
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This paper is about the shaping of the law understood as a positivist enterprise. Positivist law has been the object of contentious debate. Since the 1960s, and with the surfacing of revisionist histories, it has been suggested that the abstraction of the doctrine of criminal law is due to its categorisation in early histories. However, it is argued here that positivism was hardly an intentional master plan of autocratic social control. Rather, it is important to recognise that historians do not provide a value-free recount of history. This paper examines this assertion by drawing on the writings of the English jurists William Blackstone and his work Commentaries on the Law of England (1765), and James Fitzjames Stephen’s A History of the Criminal Law of England (1883). Taking these scholars not as mere a-historical writers but reflecting on the fact that they inevitably ‘functioned’ as conduits of their own social practise opens an inquiry into the social response to a social need, which was already under way long before their time.
如何书写实证主义法律史:来自18、19世纪英国法学家威廉·布莱克斯通和詹姆斯·菲茨詹姆斯·斯蒂芬的启示
这篇论文是关于法律的塑造被理解为一个实证主义的事业。实证主义法律一直是争论的对象。自20世纪60年代以来,随着修正主义历史的浮出水面,有人认为刑法学说的抽象是由于其在早期历史中的分类。然而,本文认为,实证主义几乎不是专制社会控制的有意总体规划。相反,重要的是要认识到,历史学家并没有提供一种没有价值的历史叙述。本文通过借鉴英国法学家威廉·布莱克斯通的著作及其著作《英国法律评论》(1765)和詹姆斯·菲茨詹姆斯·斯蒂芬的《英国刑法史》(1883)来检验这一论断。不要把这些学者仅仅看作是历史作家,而要考虑到他们不可避免地作为他们自己的社会实践的渠道而“发挥作用”这一事实,这就开启了对社会需求的社会反应的研究,这种社会反应在他们的时代之前就已经开始了。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Architectural Histories
Architectural Histories ARCHITECTURE-
CiteScore
0.70
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