Репозиторијум Правног факултета Универзитета у Београду
Универзитет у Београду - Правни факултет
    • English
    • Српски
    • Српски (Serbia)
  • Српски (ћирилица) 
    • Енглески
    • Српски (ћирилица)
    • Српски (латиница)
  • Пријава
Преглед записа 
  •   RALF
  • Pravni fakultet / Faculty of Law University of Belgrade
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications
  • Преглед записа
  •   RALF
  • Pravni fakultet / Faculty of Law University of Belgrade
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications
  • Преглед записа
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Hartʼs judicial discretion revisited

Thumbnail
2023
Преузимање 🢃
bitstream_1748.pdf (787.4Kb)
Download PDF (282.8Kb)
Аутори
Dajović, Goran
Чланак у часопису (Објављена верзија)
Метаподаци
Приказ свих података о документу
Апстракт
The Harvard Law Review recently, for the first time, published Hart’s essay titled “Discretion”. It is a carefully arranged version of the lecture which he gave at Harvard in 1956. This essay fills significant gap in Hart's work concerning judicial reasoning. In my paper attention is devoted to his conception of judicial discretion, its two main types (express and tacit), and his understanding of interpretation and rationality related to Hartian discretion. According to Hart, discretion is a form of decision-making in hard cases, which is rational and to some extent constrained by law. However, because no combination of legal rules and principles, properly interpreted, will always give only one legally right answer, the judge in some cases must resort to non-legal reasons, i.e. exercise discretion. Hart’s insight that the law is not the sole ground for (judicial) decisions suggests that there is something “out there” (in our “practical universe”) that plays a role in the legal “earthly...” world, and consequently, in the judicial world as well.

Извор:
Revus, 2023, 2023, 50

DOI: 10.4000/revus.9735

ISSN: 1581-7652

Scopus: 2-s2.0-85171793531
[ Google Scholar ]
1
URI
https://ralf.ius.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1398
Колекције
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers’ publications
  • Radovi - Advancing Cooperation on the Foundations of Law - Project
  • Radovi - Centar za temeljna pravna znanja / Center for Legal Fundamentals
  • Radovi - Institut za pravne i društvene nauke / Institute for Legal and Social Sciences
Институција/група
Pravni fakultet / Faculty of Law University of Belgrade
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Dajović, Goran
PY  - 2023
UR  - https://ralf.ius.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1398
AB  - The Harvard Law Review recently, for the first time, published Hart’s essay titled “Discretion”. It is a carefully arranged version of the lecture which he gave at Harvard in 1956. This essay fills significant gap in Hart's work concerning judicial reasoning. In my paper attention is devoted to his conception of judicial discretion, its two main types (express and tacit), and his understanding of interpretation and rationality related to Hartian discretion. According to Hart, discretion is a form of decision-making in hard cases, which is rational and to some extent constrained by law. However, because no combination of legal rules and principles, properly interpreted, will always give only one legally right answer, the judge in some cases must resort to non-legal reasons, i.e. exercise discretion. Hart’s insight that the law is not the sole ground for (judicial) decisions suggests that there is something “out there” (in our “practical universe”) that plays a role in the legal “earthly” world, and consequently, in the judicial world as well.
T2  - Revus
T1  - Hartʼs judicial discretion revisited
IS  - 50
VL  - 2023
DO  - 10.4000/revus.9735
UR  - conv_3312
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Dajović, Goran",
year = "2023",
abstract = "The Harvard Law Review recently, for the first time, published Hart’s essay titled “Discretion”. It is a carefully arranged version of the lecture which he gave at Harvard in 1956. This essay fills significant gap in Hart's work concerning judicial reasoning. In my paper attention is devoted to his conception of judicial discretion, its two main types (express and tacit), and his understanding of interpretation and rationality related to Hartian discretion. According to Hart, discretion is a form of decision-making in hard cases, which is rational and to some extent constrained by law. However, because no combination of legal rules and principles, properly interpreted, will always give only one legally right answer, the judge in some cases must resort to non-legal reasons, i.e. exercise discretion. Hart’s insight that the law is not the sole ground for (judicial) decisions suggests that there is something “out there” (in our “practical universe”) that plays a role in the legal “earthly” world, and consequently, in the judicial world as well.",
journal = "Revus",
title = "Hartʼs judicial discretion revisited",
number = "50",
volume = "2023",
doi = "10.4000/revus.9735",
url = "conv_3312"
}
Dajović, G.. (2023). Hartʼs judicial discretion revisited. in Revus, 2023(50).
https://doi.org/10.4000/revus.9735
conv_3312
Dajović G. Hartʼs judicial discretion revisited. in Revus. 2023;2023(50).
doi:10.4000/revus.9735
conv_3312 .
Dajović, Goran, "Hartʼs judicial discretion revisited" in Revus, 2023, no. 50 (2023),
https://doi.org/10.4000/revus.9735 .,
conv_3312 .

DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
О репозиторијуму RALF | Пошаљите запажања

EU_logoOpenAIRERCUB
 

 

Комплетан репозиторијумГрупеАуториНасловиТемеОва институцијаАуториНасловиТеме

Статистика

Преглед статистика

DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
О репозиторијуму RALF | Пошаљите запажања

EU_logoOpenAIRERCUB