Against Obligation: The Multiple Sources of Authority in a Liberal Democracy

Against Obligation: The Multiple Sources of Authority in a Liberal Democracy

by Abner S. Greene
Against Obligation: The Multiple Sources of Authority in a Liberal Democracy

Against Obligation: The Multiple Sources of Authority in a Liberal Democracy

by Abner S. Greene

eBook

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Overview

Do citizens of a nation such as the United States have a moral duty to obey the law? Do officials, when interpreting the Constitution, have an obligation to follow what that text meant when ratified? To follow precedent? To follow what the Supreme Court today says the Constitution means?

These are questions of political obligation (for citizens) and interpretive obligation (for anyone interpreting the Constitution, often officials). Abner Greene argues that such obligations do not exist. Although citizens should obey some laws entirely, and other laws in some instances, no one has put forth a successful argument that citizens should obey all laws all the time. Greene’s case is not only “against” obligation. It is also “for” an approach he calls “permeable sovereignty”: all of our norms are on equal footing with the state’s laws. Accordingly, the state should accommodate religious, philosophical, family, or tribal norms whenever possible.

Greene shows that questions of interpretive obligation share many qualities with those of political obligation. In rejecting the view that constitutional interpreters must follow either prior or higher sources of constitutional meaning, Greene confronts and turns aside arguments similar to those offered for a moral duty of citizens to obey the law.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674069398
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 04/13/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 345
File size: 440 KB

About the Author

Abner S. Greene is Leonard F. Manning Professor of Law at Fordham University.

Table of Contents

Contents Introduction 1. Against Political Obligation 2. Accommodating Our Plural Obligations 3. Against Interpretive Obligation to the Past 4. Against Interpretive Obligation to the Supreme Court Conclusion Notes Bibliography Acknowledgments Index
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