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(2016) Hans Kelsen in America, Dordrecht, Springer.

Marmor's Kelsen

Michael S. Green

pp. 31-55

Andrei Marmor's reading of Kelsen in his book Philosophy of Law (2011) exemplifies American and Anglophone interpretations, which see Kelsen as failing to consistently offer a pure theory of law. I argue that Marmor misreads Kelsen in three ways, each of which makes it appear as if Kelsen reduced the law to social facts. First, Marmor wrongly marginalizes the doctrine of the unity of law in Kelsen's legal theory, thereby making Kelsen look as if he thought multiple independent legal systems, each dependent upon a human community, exist. Second, Marmor misreads Kelsen's doctrine of efficacy as the view that the existence of a legal system fundamentally depends upon the norms of the system being followed by a community's members. Third, Marmor misunderstands the Neo-Kantian nature of Kelsen's legal theory, attributing to Kelsen the very psychologism that he argued against. Once these three mistakes are corrected, we can understand Kelsen as having offered a genuinely pure theory of law. But the question remains whether we have a reason to accept the theory. I end by briefly discussing some evidence from the conflict of laws that suggests that jurists treat the law as not reducible to social facts.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-33130-0_3

Full citation:

Green, M. S. (2016)., Marmor's Kelsen, in , Hans Kelsen in America, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 31-55.

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