ABSTRACT
This article explores the relationship between descriptive and normative work in general legal theory by focusing on the possibility of describing contingent evaluations, as contrasted with a theoretical commitment to such an evaluation. This gives rise to a crucial distinction between analytical-descriptive and aspirational-normative theoretical work. Section I traces different levels of theoretical analysis, and the recognition of different theoretical roles in tackling normative subject matter. Section II introduces a triple-level analytical scheme developed to expand the Hohfeldian analysis of legal rights. This additional analytical resource is then utilized in working through different levels of the analysis of legal rights, and to reveal some points of overlap with the different levels of analysis of law’s normativity found in Section I. This broader understanding is then related to the different theoretical roles identified in Section I, so as to produce a classification of theoretical approaches to rights, with the aim of revealing where intelligible discourse between them is possible.
Halpin, Andrew, Analytical, Normative, Aspirational: Connecting and Disconnecting Theoretical Approaches to Rights (August 29, 2024).
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