Consent in the law:
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford [u.a.]
Hart
2007
|
Schriftenreihe: | Legal theory today
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XVII, 388 S. |
ISBN: | 9781841136790 |
Internformat
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | CONSENT IN THE LAW DERYCK BEYLEVELD AND ROGER BROWNSWORD *HART-
PUBLISHING OXFORD AND PORTLAND, OREGON 2007 CONTENTS TABLE OF CASES XI
TABLE OF LEGISLATION XV 1 CONSENT IN THE LAW: A PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION
1 1 INTRODUCTION 1 II WHAT IS THERE TO UNDERSTAND ABOUT CONSENT? 4 (I)
THE FUNCTION OF CONSENT 5 (II) THE CONDITIONS FOR GIVING A VALID CONSENT
7 (HI) THE CAPACITY (AND COMPETENCE) TO CONSENT 12 (IV) DOES IT MATTER
WHO GIVES GONSENT (INCLUDING BY PROXY) AND TO WHOM IT IS GIVEN? 14 (V)
THE NECESSITY, SUFFICIENCY, AND JUSTIFYING LIMITS OF CONSENT 15 (VI) THE
SIGNALLING OF CONSENT 19 (VII) THE SCOPE AND INTERPRETATION OF CONSENT
22 (VIII) WITHDRAWAL OF CONSENT 23 (IX) REFUSAL OF CONSENT 25 III
MAPPING THE ETHICS OF CONSENT 27 (I) A UTILITARIAN APPROACH AND CONSENT
27 (II) A RIGHTS-LED APPROACH (UNDER A WILL THEORY OF RIGHTS) AND
CONSENT 29 (HI) A DUTY-LED APPROACH AND CONSENT 3 1 IV THE PURPOSE AND
PLAN OF THE BOOK 32 CODA 34 PART ONE: A GEWIRTHIAN APPROACH TO CONSENT
IN THE LAW 2 THE PRINCIPLE OF GENERIC CONSISTENCY: ITS JUSTIFICATION AND
APPLICATION 39 I INTRODUCTION 39 II THEPGC 39 V CONTENTS III WHY EMPLOY
THE PGC? 41 (I) THE DIALECTICALLY NECESSARY ARGUMENT 41 (II) AN
ALTERNATIVE PRESENTATION OF THIS ARGUMENT 43 (HI) DERIVING ACCEPTANCE OF
THE PGC FROM THE ACCEPTANCE OF MORALITY 44 (IV) THE DIALECTICALLY
CONTINGENT ARGUMENT FROM THE ACCEPTANCE OF HUMAN RIGHTS 46 (V) THE
DIALECTICALLY CONTINGENT ARGUMENT FROM IMPARTIAL RATIONALITY 50 IV
APPLYING THE PGC 51 (I) EMPIRICAL SPECIFICATION OF THE GENERIC
CONDITIONS 51 (II) JUDGING AGENCY (PRECAUTION UNDER A CATEGORICAL
IMPERATIVE) 52 (HI) DIRECT AND INDIRECT APPLICATIONS 55 3 THE FUNCTIONS
OF CONSENT IN THE LAW 59 I INTRODUCTION 59 II CONSENT AS A PROCEDURAL
JUSTIFICATION 61 III HOHFELDIAN ANALYSIS AND CONSENT 64 (I) A HAS A
RIGHT; B HAS A DUTY 65 (II) A HAS A PRIVILEGE; B HAS A NO-RIGHT 66 (HI)
A HAS A POWER; B HAS A LIABILITY 69 (A) POWERS WITH A RIGHT/DUTY
BASELINE 70 (B) POWERS WITH A PRIVILEGE/NO-RIGHT BASELINE 71 (IV) A HAS
AN IMMUNITY; B HAS A DISABILITY 74 IV THE CONSENT PROVISO 74 (I) A HAS A
RIGHT; B HAS A DUTY 75 (II) A HAS A PRIVILEGE; B HAS A NO-RIGHT 76 (HI)
A HAS A POWER; B HAS A LIABILITY 79 (IV) A HAS AN IMMUNITY; B HAS A
DISABILITY 80 (V) SUMMARY 80 V THE FUNCTIONS OF CONSENT IN THE LAW: A
WORKING MODEL 81 (I) CHANGES INTERNAL TO A RELATIONSHIP 81 (II) CHANGES
THAT CREATE A LEGAL RELATIONSHIP 82 (IN) A WORKING MODEL OF THE
FUNCTIONS OF CONSENT IN THE LAW 83 VI THE CONSENT PROVISO AND THE
GEWIRTHIAN WILL THEORY OF RIGHTS 85 VII THE AGENDA FOR DISCUSSION 88 VI
CONTENTS PART TWO: CONSENT IN THE LAW I: QUESTIONS OF ADEQUACY 4
SUBJECTS OF CONSENT: QUESTIONS OF CAPACITY AND COMPETENCE 93 I
INTRODUCTION 93 II IDENTIFYING SUBJECTS OF CONSENT 98 (I) THE
IDEAL-TYPICAL SUBJECT OF CONSENT 98 (II) SUBJECTS OF CONSENT VIEWED
UNDER THE PRECAUTIONARY PRINCIPLE 101 (A) PROTECTION UNDER PRECAUTION
101 (B) BENEFICIARIES OF PRECAUTION 104 (C) INTERMITTENT AGENTS 108 (D)
TASK COMPETENCE 110 (HI) WHEN DOES ONE BECOME A SUBJECT OF CONSENT? THE
QUESTION OF AGE LIMITS 111 III DEALING WITH NON-IDEAL-TYPICAL SUBJECTS
OF CONSENT 114 (I) SUBSTITUTED JUDGEMENT: THE CASE OF JERRY STRUNK 114
(II) BEST INTERESTS 117 (IN) PROXIES 119 (IV) DEALING WITH THE DEAD 121
(V) JUSTIFYING ACTIONS WITHOUT CONSENT 123 IV CONCLUSION 123 5 THE
CONDITIONS OF (VALID) CONSENT I: UNFORCED AND INFORMED CHOICE 125 I
INTRODUCTION 125 II A GEWIRTHIAN APPROACH TO THE CONDITIONS OF CONSENT
127 III CONSENT: THE PIVOTAL CONDITIONS 130 (I) UNFORCED CHOICE 131 (A)
WHAT COUNTS AS EXTERNAL FORCE? 133 (B) UNFORCED CHOICE, INVOLUNTARY
ACTION, AND ACTING AGAINST ONE S WILL 138 (C) LIMITED CHOICE 143 (II)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING 145 IV CONCLUSION 153 VII CONTENTS 6 THE
CONDITIONS OF CONSENT II: DURESS, UNDUE INFLUENCE, AND DISCLOSURE 155 I
INTRODUCTION 155 II FREE CHOICE, ECONOMIC DURESS, AND UNDUE INFLUENCE
156 (I) DURESS 159 (II) UNDUE INFLUENCE 165 III INFORMED CONSENT AND
DISCLOSURE 170 IV CONCLUSION 183 7 QUESTIONS OF SIGNALLING AND SCOPE,
WITHDRAWAL, AND REFUSAL 187 I INTRODUCTION 187 II THE SIGNALLING OF
CONSENT 188 (I) THE SUBJECTIVE TEST 190 (II) SIGNALLING IN PERSON 197
(HI) DISTINCT AND DEFINITE SIGNALLING 199 (IV) UNEQUIVOCAL SIGNAL 205
(V) EX ANTE 207 (VI) THE TIMING OF CONSENT AND THE PROVISO RE DELAY 208
(A) WHERE A CHANGE OF MIND IS PERMITTED 209 (B) WHERE A CHANGE OF MIND
IS NOT PERMITTED 211 (VII) TAKING STOCK 212 III THE SCOPE AND
INTERPRETATION OF CONSENT 212 IV WITHDRAWAL AND REFUSAL OF CONSENT 221
(I) WITHDRAWAL OF CONSENT 221 (A) WITHDRAWAL IN RELATION TO AN AGREED
CHANGE OF POSITION 222 (B) WITHDRAWAL IN RELATION TO THE CONSENSUAL
CREATION OF A NEW RELATIONSHIP 223 (II) REFUSAL 225 V CONCLUSION 226
PART THREE: CONSENT IN THE LAW II: QUESTIONS OF NECESSITY AND
SUFFICIENCY 8 THE NECESSITY, SUFFICIENCY, AND RELEVANCE OF CONSENT I:
PRIVATE WRONG AND PRIVATE EMPOWERMENT 231 I INTRODUCTION 231 VIII
CONTENTS II PRIVATE WRONG: THE NECESSITY AND SUFFICIENCY OF CONSENT:
SOME GROUNDWORK 232 II PRIVATE WRONG: THE NECESSITY AND SUFFICIENCY OF
CONSENT AS A RELEVANT JUSTIFICATORY CONDITION 237 (I) VIEWING CONSENT
FROM A GEWIRTHIAN PERSPECTIVE 240 (II) ONE ASPECT OF THE FALLACY OF
NECESSITY: WITHOUT CONSENT THERE IS A WRONG 242 (HI) COMMERCIAL
EXPLOITATION WITHOUT CONSENT 243 (IV) DEFENCES TO PRIVATE WRONG AND A
SECOND ASPECT OF THE FALLACY OF NECESSITY 252 (V) THE SUFFICIENCY OF
CONSENT 256 IV PRIVATE EMPOWERMENT: THE NECESSITY AND SUFFICIENCY OF
CONSENT AS A RELEVANT JUSTIFICATORY CONDITION 257 (I) THE NECESSITY OF
CONSENT 259 (II) THE SUFFICIENCY OF CONSENT 264 V CONCLUSION 267 9 THE
NECESSITY, SUFFICIENCY, AND RELEVANCE OF CONSENT II: PUBLIC WRONG 269 I
INTRODUCTION 269 II PUBLIC WRONG AND THE SUFFICIENCY OF CONSENT 270 (I)
AUTONOMY-LIMITATION I: THE REGULATION OF ASSISTED SUICIDE AND
HOMOSEXUALITY 272 (A) ASSISTED SUICIDE 273 (B) HOMOSEXUALITY 285 (II)
AUTONOMY-LIMITATION II: THE REGULATION OF ACCESS TO REPRODUCTIVE
TECHNOLOGIES 291 (HI) TAKING STOCK 297 III NON-CONSENSUAL JUSTIFICATIONS
AND EXCUSES 297 IV CONCLUSION 303 PART FOUR: CONSENT AS THE BASIS OF
LEGAL (POLITICAL) AUTHORITY AND OBLIGATION 10 CONSENT AND THE STABILITY
AND AUTHORITY OF LAW 307 I INTRODUCTION 307 11 LAW S CLAIM TO AUTHORITY
311 IX CONTENTS III THE INTERNAL PROBLEM OF AUTHORITY 316 IV THE
EXTERNAL PROBLEM OF AUTHORITY 323 V CONCLUSION 330 11 CONSENT AS
PROCEDURAL JUSTIFICATION: CONCLUDING REMARKS 333 I INTRODUCTION 333 II
METHODOLOGY 334 III THE FUNCTIONS OF CONSENT 335 RV FROM A SIMPLE
COMMUNITY OF RIGHTS TO A LEGAL COMMUNITY OF RIGHTS 338 V WHO CAN
CONSENT? 342 VI DISENTANGLING THE REQUIREMENTS OF AN ADEQUATE CONSENT
343 (I) SIGNALLING 343 (II) UNFORCED CHOICE 345 (IN) INFORMED CHOICE 347
(IV) INTERPRETATION 349 (V) TAKING STOCK 350 VII RELATIVE AUTONOMY 351
VIII THE JUSTIFICATORY POWER AND PROVINCE OF CONSENT 355 (I) THE FALLACY
OF NECESSITY 355 (II) THE FALLACY OF SUFFICIENCY 356 IX LEGITIMATION AND
LEGITIMACY 357 X GOVERNANCE BY CONSENT AND THE AUTHORITY OF THE LAW
359 XI LAW AND CONSENT IN THE GLOBAL ORDER AFTER 9/1 1 361 INDEX 365
|
adam_txt |
CONSENT IN THE LAW DERYCK BEYLEVELD AND ROGER BROWNSWORD *HART-
PUBLISHING OXFORD AND PORTLAND, OREGON 2007 CONTENTS TABLE OF CASES XI
TABLE OF LEGISLATION XV 1 CONSENT IN THE LAW: A PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION
1 1 INTRODUCTION 1 II WHAT IS THERE TO UNDERSTAND ABOUT CONSENT? 4 (I)
THE FUNCTION OF CONSENT 5 (II) THE CONDITIONS FOR GIVING A VALID CONSENT
7 (HI) THE CAPACITY (AND COMPETENCE) TO CONSENT 12 (IV) DOES IT MATTER
WHO GIVES GONSENT (INCLUDING BY PROXY) AND TO WHOM IT IS GIVEN? 14 (V)
THE NECESSITY, SUFFICIENCY, AND JUSTIFYING LIMITS OF CONSENT 15 (VI) THE
SIGNALLING OF CONSENT 19 (VII) THE SCOPE AND INTERPRETATION OF CONSENT
22 (VIII) WITHDRAWAL OF CONSENT 23 (IX) REFUSAL OF CONSENT 25 III
MAPPING THE ETHICS OF CONSENT 27 (I) A UTILITARIAN APPROACH AND CONSENT
27 (II) A RIGHTS-LED APPROACH (UNDER A WILL THEORY OF RIGHTS) AND
CONSENT 29 (HI) A DUTY-LED APPROACH AND CONSENT 3 1 IV THE PURPOSE AND
PLAN OF THE BOOK 32 CODA 34 PART ONE: A GEWIRTHIAN APPROACH TO CONSENT
IN THE LAW 2 THE PRINCIPLE OF GENERIC CONSISTENCY: ITS JUSTIFICATION AND
APPLICATION 39 I INTRODUCTION 39 II THEPGC 39 V CONTENTS III WHY EMPLOY
THE PGC? 41 (I) THE DIALECTICALLY NECESSARY ARGUMENT 41 (II) AN
ALTERNATIVE PRESENTATION OF THIS ARGUMENT 43 (HI) DERIVING ACCEPTANCE OF
THE PGC FROM THE ACCEPTANCE OF MORALITY 44 (IV) THE DIALECTICALLY
CONTINGENT ARGUMENT FROM THE ACCEPTANCE OF HUMAN RIGHTS 46 (V) THE
DIALECTICALLY CONTINGENT ARGUMENT FROM IMPARTIAL RATIONALITY 50 IV
APPLYING THE PGC 51 (I) EMPIRICAL SPECIFICATION OF THE GENERIC
CONDITIONS 51 (II) JUDGING AGENCY (PRECAUTION UNDER A CATEGORICAL
IMPERATIVE) 52 (HI) DIRECT AND INDIRECT APPLICATIONS 55 3 THE FUNCTIONS
OF CONSENT IN THE LAW 59 I INTRODUCTION 59 II CONSENT AS A PROCEDURAL
JUSTIFICATION 61 III HOHFELDIAN ANALYSIS AND CONSENT 64 (I) A HAS A
RIGHT; B HAS A DUTY 65 (II) A HAS A PRIVILEGE; B HAS A NO-RIGHT 66 (HI)
A HAS A POWER; B HAS A LIABILITY 69 (A) POWERS WITH A RIGHT/DUTY
BASELINE 70 (B) POWERS WITH A PRIVILEGE/NO-RIGHT BASELINE 71 (IV) A HAS
AN IMMUNITY; B HAS A DISABILITY 74 IV THE CONSENT PROVISO 74 (I) A HAS A
RIGHT; B HAS A DUTY 75 (II) A HAS A PRIVILEGE; B HAS A NO-RIGHT 76 (HI)
A HAS A POWER; B HAS A LIABILITY 79 (IV) A HAS AN IMMUNITY; B HAS A
DISABILITY 80 (V) SUMMARY 80 V THE FUNCTIONS OF CONSENT IN THE LAW: A
WORKING MODEL 81 (I) CHANGES INTERNAL TO A RELATIONSHIP 81 (II) CHANGES
THAT CREATE A LEGAL RELATIONSHIP 82 (IN) A WORKING MODEL OF THE
FUNCTIONS OF CONSENT IN THE LAW 83 VI THE CONSENT PROVISO AND THE
GEWIRTHIAN WILL THEORY OF RIGHTS 85 VII THE AGENDA FOR DISCUSSION 88 VI
CONTENTS PART TWO: CONSENT IN THE LAW I: QUESTIONS OF ADEQUACY 4
SUBJECTS OF CONSENT: QUESTIONS OF CAPACITY AND COMPETENCE 93 I
INTRODUCTION 93 II IDENTIFYING SUBJECTS OF CONSENT 98 (I) THE
IDEAL-TYPICAL SUBJECT OF CONSENT 98 (II) SUBJECTS OF CONSENT VIEWED
UNDER THE PRECAUTIONARY PRINCIPLE 101 (A) PROTECTION UNDER PRECAUTION
101 (B) BENEFICIARIES OF PRECAUTION 104 (C) INTERMITTENT AGENTS 108 (D)
TASK COMPETENCE 110 (HI) WHEN DOES ONE BECOME A SUBJECT OF CONSENT? THE
QUESTION OF AGE LIMITS 111 III DEALING WITH NON-IDEAL-TYPICAL SUBJECTS
OF CONSENT 114 (I) SUBSTITUTED JUDGEMENT: THE CASE OF JERRY STRUNK 114
(II) BEST INTERESTS 117 (IN) PROXIES 119 (IV) DEALING WITH THE DEAD 121
(V) JUSTIFYING ACTIONS WITHOUT CONSENT 123 IV CONCLUSION 123 5 THE
CONDITIONS OF (VALID) CONSENT I: UNFORCED AND INFORMED CHOICE 125 I
INTRODUCTION 125 II A GEWIRTHIAN APPROACH TO THE CONDITIONS OF CONSENT
127 III CONSENT: THE PIVOTAL CONDITIONS 130 (I) UNFORCED CHOICE 131 (A)
WHAT COUNTS AS EXTERNAL FORCE? 133 (B) UNFORCED CHOICE, INVOLUNTARY
ACTION, AND ACTING AGAINST ONE'S WILL 138 (C) LIMITED CHOICE 143 (II)
KNOWLEDGE AND UNDERSTANDING 145 IV CONCLUSION 153 VII CONTENTS 6 THE
CONDITIONS OF CONSENT II: DURESS, UNDUE INFLUENCE, AND DISCLOSURE 155 I
INTRODUCTION 155 II FREE CHOICE, ECONOMIC DURESS, AND UNDUE INFLUENCE
156 (I) DURESS 159 (II) UNDUE INFLUENCE 165 III INFORMED CONSENT AND
DISCLOSURE 170 IV CONCLUSION 183 7 QUESTIONS OF SIGNALLING AND SCOPE,
WITHDRAWAL, AND REFUSAL 187 I INTRODUCTION 187 II THE SIGNALLING OF
CONSENT 188 (I) THE SUBJECTIVE TEST 190 (II) SIGNALLING IN PERSON 197
(HI) DISTINCT AND DEFINITE SIGNALLING 199 (IV) UNEQUIVOCAL SIGNAL 205
(V) EX ANTE 207 (VI) THE TIMING OF CONSENT AND THE PROVISO RE DELAY 208
(A) WHERE A CHANGE OF MIND IS PERMITTED 209 (B) WHERE A CHANGE OF MIND
IS NOT PERMITTED 211 (VII) TAKING STOCK 212 III THE SCOPE AND
INTERPRETATION OF CONSENT 212 IV WITHDRAWAL AND REFUSAL OF CONSENT 221
(I) WITHDRAWAL OF CONSENT 221 (A) WITHDRAWAL IN RELATION TO AN AGREED
CHANGE OF POSITION 222 (B) WITHDRAWAL IN RELATION TO THE CONSENSUAL
CREATION OF A NEW RELATIONSHIP 223 (II) REFUSAL 225 V CONCLUSION 226
PART THREE: CONSENT IN THE LAW II: QUESTIONS OF NECESSITY AND
SUFFICIENCY 8 THE NECESSITY, SUFFICIENCY, AND RELEVANCE OF CONSENT I:
PRIVATE WRONG AND PRIVATE EMPOWERMENT 231 I INTRODUCTION 231 VIII
CONTENTS II PRIVATE WRONG: THE NECESSITY AND SUFFICIENCY OF CONSENT:
SOME GROUNDWORK 232 II PRIVATE WRONG: THE NECESSITY AND SUFFICIENCY OF
CONSENT AS A RELEVANT JUSTIFICATORY CONDITION 237 (I) VIEWING CONSENT
FROM A GEWIRTHIAN PERSPECTIVE 240 (II) ONE ASPECT OF THE FALLACY OF
NECESSITY: WITHOUT CONSENT THERE IS A WRONG 242 (HI) COMMERCIAL
EXPLOITATION WITHOUT CONSENT 243 (IV) DEFENCES TO PRIVATE WRONG AND A
SECOND ASPECT OF THE FALLACY OF NECESSITY 252 (V) THE SUFFICIENCY OF
CONSENT 256 IV PRIVATE EMPOWERMENT: THE NECESSITY AND SUFFICIENCY OF
CONSENT AS A RELEVANT JUSTIFICATORY CONDITION 257 (I) THE NECESSITY OF
CONSENT 259 (II) THE SUFFICIENCY OF CONSENT 264 V CONCLUSION 267 9 THE
NECESSITY, SUFFICIENCY, AND RELEVANCE OF CONSENT II: PUBLIC WRONG 269 I
INTRODUCTION 269 II PUBLIC WRONG AND THE SUFFICIENCY OF CONSENT 270 (I)
AUTONOMY-LIMITATION I: THE REGULATION OF ASSISTED SUICIDE AND
HOMOSEXUALITY 272 (A) ASSISTED SUICIDE 273 (B) HOMOSEXUALITY 285 (II)
AUTONOMY-LIMITATION II: THE REGULATION OF ACCESS TO REPRODUCTIVE
TECHNOLOGIES 291 (HI) TAKING STOCK 297 III NON-CONSENSUAL JUSTIFICATIONS
AND EXCUSES 297 IV CONCLUSION 303 PART FOUR: CONSENT AS THE BASIS OF
LEGAL (POLITICAL) AUTHORITY AND OBLIGATION 10 CONSENT AND THE STABILITY
AND AUTHORITY OF LAW 307 I INTRODUCTION 307 11 LAW'S CLAIM TO AUTHORITY
311 IX CONTENTS III THE INTERNAL PROBLEM OF AUTHORITY 316 IV THE
EXTERNAL PROBLEM OF AUTHORITY 323 V CONCLUSION 330 11 CONSENT AS
PROCEDURAL JUSTIFICATION: CONCLUDING REMARKS 333 I INTRODUCTION 333 II
METHODOLOGY 334 III THE FUNCTIONS OF CONSENT 335 RV FROM A SIMPLE
COMMUNITY OF RIGHTS TO A LEGAL COMMUNITY OF RIGHTS 338 V WHO CAN
CONSENT? 342 VI DISENTANGLING THE REQUIREMENTS OF AN ADEQUATE CONSENT
343 (I) SIGNALLING 343 (II) UNFORCED CHOICE 345 (IN) INFORMED CHOICE 347
(IV) INTERPRETATION 349 (V) TAKING STOCK 350 VII RELATIVE AUTONOMY 351
VIII THE JUSTIFICATORY POWER AND PROVINCE OF CONSENT 355 (I) THE FALLACY
OF NECESSITY 355 (II) THE FALLACY OF SUFFICIENCY 356 IX LEGITIMATION AND
LEGITIMACY 357 X 'GOVERNANCE BY CONSENT' AND THE AUTHORITY OF THE LAW
359 XI LAW AND CONSENT IN THE GLOBAL ORDER AFTER 9/1 1 361 INDEX 365 |
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author | Beyleveld, Deryck 1947- Brownsword, Roger ca. 20./21. Jh |
author_GND | (DE-588)12228643X (DE-588)1027004555 |
author_facet | Beyleveld, Deryck 1947- Brownsword, Roger ca. 20./21. Jh |
author_role | aut aut |
author_sort | Beyleveld, Deryck 1947- |
author_variant | d b db r b rb |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV022257964 |
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callnumber-raw | K579.I6 |
callnumber-search | K579.I6 |
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ctrlnum | (OCoLC)255161419 (DE-599)BVBBV022257964 |
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dewey-tens | 340 - Law |
discipline | Rechtswissenschaft |
discipline_str_mv | Rechtswissenschaft |
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id | DE-604.BV022257964 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T16:41:46Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T20:53:31Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781841136790 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-015468654 |
oclc_num | 255161419 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-M382 DE-12 DE-703 |
owner_facet | DE-M382 DE-12 DE-703 |
physical | XVII, 388 S. |
publishDate | 2007 |
publishDateSearch | 2007 |
publishDateSort | 2007 |
publisher | Hart |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Legal theory today |
spelling | Beyleveld, Deryck 1947- Verfasser (DE-588)12228643X aut Consent in the law Deryck Beyleveld and Roger Brownsword Oxford [u.a.] Hart 2007 XVII, 388 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Legal theory today Consent (Law) Konsens Law and ethics Rechtsordnung Brownsword, Roger ca. 20./21. Jh. Verfasser (DE-588)1027004555 aut GBV Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015468654&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Beyleveld, Deryck 1947- Brownsword, Roger ca. 20./21. Jh Consent in the law Consent (Law) Konsens Law and ethics Rechtsordnung |
title | Consent in the law |
title_auth | Consent in the law |
title_exact_search | Consent in the law |
title_exact_search_txtP | Consent in the law |
title_full | Consent in the law Deryck Beyleveld and Roger Brownsword |
title_fullStr | Consent in the law Deryck Beyleveld and Roger Brownsword |
title_full_unstemmed | Consent in the law Deryck Beyleveld and Roger Brownsword |
title_short | Consent in the law |
title_sort | consent in the law |
topic | Consent (Law) Konsens Law and ethics Rechtsordnung |
topic_facet | Consent (Law) Konsens Law and ethics Rechtsordnung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015468654&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT beyleveldderyck consentinthelaw AT brownswordroger consentinthelaw |