ABSTRACT
This short paper addresses a well-known difficulty in the Pure Theory of Law: the definition of a legal wrong. Kelsen was unable to offer a suitable one, critics say. I agree. But the critics misdiagnosed the problem, and prescribed for it a fruitless solution. The reason for Kelsen’s failure, the critics say, was that he thought the law consists only of sanction-stipulating norms addressed to officials, and does not comprise duty-imposing norms addressed to citizens. But the critics are wrong, exegetically as well as substantively. Kelsen did not – and indeed could not – deny that there are such duty-imposing norms; and it is not the case, in any event, that the admission that there are such norms would enable us to explain the notion of a legal wrong. Kelsen failed to provide an adequate characterization of the notion of a legal wrong, yes, but for a different reason.
Luís Duarte d’Almeida, Wrongs and Sanctions in the Pure Theory of Law, Ratio Juris, Volume 35, Issue 3, September 2022, pages 247-257. First published: 5 August 2022.
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