Description
About the Author
David Dyzenhaus is University Professor of Law and Philosophy at the University of Toronto. He is the author of four books and many essays at the intersection of political philosophy, legal philosophy, and public law theory. In 2014/15 he was the Arthur Goodhart Visiting Professor of Legal Science in the Faculty of Law, Cambridge University. Malcolm Thorburn is Associate Professor of Law at the University of Toronto. Until 2012, he held the Canada Research Chair in Crime, Security and Constitutionalism at Queen's University. He has been a visiting fellow at the Australian National University (2008); Ludwig Maximilians University, Munich (2011); the French National Centre for Criminology (CESDIP), Paris (2011); and Magdalen College, Oxford (2011-12). He is an associate editor of the New Criminal Law Review and a member of the editorial boards of Law and Philosophy and Criminal Law and Philosophy.
Reviews
The book... is a successful introduction to the central questions [of constitutional law]. It provides intellectual roadmaps as well as explicit encouragement along the way to scholars who might wish to engage in this field of enquiry. It incorporates useful methodological discussions of philosophical, legal, and comparative common-law jurisdictions. * Tarik Olcay, The Cambridge Law Journal *
This is a wonderful collection of unfailingly engaging and interesting essays, virtually every one of them making a substantial contribution to the subject matter it discusses. The book will serve as a landmark in modern constitutional theory and its influence will inevitably reach far into the future and wide into legal systems of the world. * Pavlos Eleftheriadis, The Modern Law Review *
Book Information
ISBN 9780198754527
Author David Dyzenhaus
Format Hardback
Page Count 342
Imprint Oxford University Press
Publisher Oxford University Press
Weight(grams) 1g
Dimensions(mm) 248mm * 181mm * 25mm