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"Objectivity and Liberal Scholarship" is an essay by the American academic Noam Chomsky. [1] It was first published as part of Chomsky's American Power and the New Mandarins . [ 2 ] Parts of the essay were delivered as a lecture at New York University in March 1968, as part of Albert Schweitzer Lecture Series. [ 3 ]
Considered "the first movement in legal theory and legal scholarship in the United States to have espoused a committed Left political stance and perspective," [1] critical legal studies was committed to shaping society based on a vision of human personality devoid of the hidden interests and class domination that CLS scholars argued are at the root of liberal legal institutions in the West. [4]
Natural rights and legal rights; Non-aggression principle; Non-interventionism; Non-politics; Non-voting; Open border; Polycentric law; Private defense agency; Private property; Public choice theory; Restorative justice; Right to bear arms; Right to privacy; Rugged Individualism; Self-ownership; Single tax; Small government; Spontaneous order ...
In politics and law, liberal legalism is a belief that politics should be constrained by legal constitutional boundaries. [1] Liberal legalism has also been called legal constitutionalism, as found in United States and Germany, as opposed to political constitutionalism, which is more typical of Britain, by British constitutional scholar Adam Tomkins.
The journal was established in 2005 by students Robert Sarvis [1] and Robert McNamara. [2] In 2008, an article published by the journal was cited by Justice Antonin Scalia in his majority opinion in the landmark United States Supreme Court case of District of Columbia v.
The defining characteristics of libertarian legal theory are its insistence that the amount of governmental intervention should be kept to a minimum and the primary functions of law should be enforcement of contracts and social order, though social order is often seen as a desirable side effect of a free market rather than a philosophical ...
In 2007, Richard Danner presented two different papers arguing that John Willinsky's open access principles were also applicable to legal scholarship and information. He also presented information on the work Duke University School of Law had done to improve electronic access to journals and faculty scholarship. [ 1 ]
The law of equal liberty is the fundamental precept of liberalism and socialism. [1] Stated in various ways by many thinkers, it can be summarized as the view that all individuals must be granted the maximum possible freedom as long as that freedom does not interfere with the freedom of anyone else. [ 2 ]