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Hart'S Critique of Austin'S Theory: Literature: A. Marmor, Philosophy of Law

Hart critiques Austin's theory that law consists of commands issued by a political sovereign. Hart argues that (1) not all laws take the form of commands or obligations, as some confer powers; (2) laws have a general and prospective nature rather than being individual orders; and (3) laws serve functions beyond imposing obligations such as dispute resolution. Overall, Hart rejects Austin's view that law can be reduced to sociological concepts like habitual obedience, as law both constitutes and is constituted by concepts like sovereignty and rules.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
139 views11 pages

Hart'S Critique of Austin'S Theory: Literature: A. Marmor, Philosophy of Law

Hart critiques Austin's theory that law consists of commands issued by a political sovereign. Hart argues that (1) not all laws take the form of commands or obligations, as some confer powers; (2) laws have a general and prospective nature rather than being individual orders; and (3) laws serve functions beyond imposing obligations such as dispute resolution. Overall, Hart rejects Austin's view that law can be reduced to sociological concepts like habitual obedience, as law both constitutes and is constituted by concepts like sovereignty and rules.

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Satyam
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HART’S CRITIQUE OF

AUSTIN’S THEORY

Literature:
A. Marmor, Philosophy of Law
HART vs. AUSTIN
⚫ imperative theory of law (J. Austin, 1790-
1859)
1) law consists of instructions or directives
issued by some people in order to direct the
conduct of others
2) the guidance is ‘law’ if it emanates from the
political sovereign and purports to function as
an exercise of sovereignty

 law is (1) instructions or commands (2)


of the political sovereign
2
HART vs. AUSTIN
1) legal norm as a command
– each and every legal norm is a command
– a command is the expression of a wish by a
person (or persons), that some others behave
in a certain way, backed by a threat of
sanction
– according to Hart, Austin actually meant
‘orders’ not ‘commands’
– the form of: „Do this or else ...”
– such model of law assumes that:
a) laws are there to impose obligations
3
b) every legal norm is backed by a threat of sanction
HART vs. AUSTIN
⚫ Hart’s critique (1):
– gunman case
– order vs. generality of law
• a norm indicates 1) a general type of conduct and
2) applies to a general class of persons
• individual orders by officials?
– order vs. standing (persistent) character of law
– order vs. general habit of obedience
 Hart’s correction: general orders backed by
threats given by one generally obeyed
4
HART vs. AUSTIN
⚫ Hart’s critique (2):
– some laws have the structure of commands
(e.g. criminal law, administrative law)
– but most norms do not impose obligations
(e.g. norms conferring legal powers)
• powers to make contracts, wills, or marriages;
power to adjudicate, make by-laws
– conditional structure: „If you want to form a
legally binding contract, this is how it is done.”

 irreducibility of all legal norms to one


general form 5
HART vs. AUSTIN
⚫ Hart’s critique (3):
– not all laws are „expressions of a wish by a
sovereign that some others behave in a certain
way”
• statutes binding the legislators themselves?
– not all laws are „expressions of a wish by a
sovereign ...”
• would an enactment duly passed not be law if
those who voted for it did not know what it
meant?
– order vs. laws created by legal recognition of 6
customs
HART vs. AUSTIN
⚫ Hart’s critique (4):
– Austin greatly exaggerated the role of sanctions
in the law and the use of force
– sanctions are not a necessary condition for the
fulfilment of all the law’s functions
– Raz’s thought experiment (world of angels)
• need for: normative solutions to large-scale coordination
problems, mechanisms to determine what needs be done
in cases of disagreements, mechanisms for resolving
conflicting views, institutions entrusted with determining
the relevant facts in conflictual circumstances
 law serves many functions without the need to 7
use force
HART vs. AUSTIN
2) legal norm as a command of a political
sovereign
– if, and only if, the command emanates from
the political sovereign, then it is legal
– political sovereign = person, or group of
persons, who is habitually obeyed by a certain
population and not in the habit of obeying
anyone else
– reductive explanation: explanation of law in
terms of something else, more basic and
factual in nature 8
HART vs. AUSTIN
⚫ Hart’s critique (5):
– the idea of sovereignty is a juridical one
– sovereignty (as an institution) cannot be at the
foundations of law because it is partly the law
that constitutes what sovereignty is and who
counts as the particular sovereign in any given
population
– rules:
• constitute the status function ‘sovereign’
• determine how one becomes a sovereign
9
– game analogy
HART vs. AUSTIN
⚫ Hart’s critique (6):
– sovereignty cannot be constituted by the
habits of obedience
• legal transition of sovereignty?
• continuity of legal rules?
– Austin didn’t distinguish between regularity of
behaviour and an instance of following a rule
• going to movies, eating lunch → rules?
 impossible to offer a reductive explanation of
legal validity in terms of a sociological
10
conception of sovereignty
Thank you for
your
attention!
11

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