Description

Book Synopsis
This volume collects and revises the key essays of Gunther Teubner, one of the world’s leading sociologists of law. Written over the past twenty years, these essays examine the ‘dark side’ of functional differentiation and the prospects of societal constitutionalism as a possible remedy. Teubner's claim is that critical accounts of law and society require reformulation in the light of the sophisticated diagnoses of late modernity in the writings of Niklas Luhmann, Jacques Derrida and select examples of modernist literature. Autopoiesis, deconstruction and other post-foundational epistemological and political realities compel us to confront the fact that fundamental democratic concepts such as law and justice can no longer be based on theories of stringent argumentation or analytical philosophy. We must now approach law in terms of contingency and self-subversion rather than in terms of logical consistency and rational coherence.

Trade Review

‘For a number of years now Gunther Teubner has been one of the most important and visible figures in the sociology of law. His concept of “societal constitutionalism” has largely shaped the perspective of constitutional sociology. In these essays he deploys the heuristic power of systems theory to argue against a purely political constitutionalism and in favour of re-conceiving constitutionalisation across social fields. The collection represents a highly significant contribution to one of the key theoretical debates of our time.’
Emilios Christodoulidis, Chair of Jurisprudence, School of Law, University of Glasgow

-- .

Table of Contents

Introduction: Gunther Teubner’s foundational paradox - Andreas Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos
Part I: Law, literature and deconstruction
1 Self-subversive justice: contingency or transcendence formula of law?
2 The economics of the gift – the positivity of justice: the mutual paranoia of Jacques Derrida and Niklas Luhmann
3 Dealing with paradoxes of law: Derrida, Luhmann, Wiethölter
4 The Law before its law: Franz Kafka on the (im)possibility of Law’s self-reflection
Part II: Juridical epistemology: reconstructing the horizontal effects of human rights, the private-public dichotomy, and contracting
5 The anonymous matrix: human rights violations by ‘private’ transnational actors
6 After privatisation? The many autonomies of private law
7 In the blind spot: the hybridisation of contracting
Part III: The dark side of functional differentiation: the normative response of societal constitutionalism
8 A constitutional moment? The logics of ‘hitting the bottom’
9 Global Bukovina: legal pluralism in the world society
10 Regime-collisions: the vain search for legal unity in the fragmentation of global law
11 Horizontal constitutional rights as conflict-of-laws rules: how transnational pharmaceutical groups manipulate scientific publications
12 The project of constitutional sociology: irritating nation state constitutionalism
13 Exogenous self-binding: how social subsystems externalise their foundational paradoxes in the process of constitutionalisation
Afterword: the milestones of Teubner’s neo-pluralism - Alberto Febbrajo
Index

Critical Theory and Legal Autopoiesis: The Case

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    A Paperback / softback by Gunther Teubner, Diana Göbel

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      View other formats and editions of Critical Theory and Legal Autopoiesis: The Case by Gunther Teubner

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 29/08/2023
      ISBN13: 9781526107237, 978-1526107237
      ISBN10: 1526107236

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This volume collects and revises the key essays of Gunther Teubner, one of the world’s leading sociologists of law. Written over the past twenty years, these essays examine the ‘dark side’ of functional differentiation and the prospects of societal constitutionalism as a possible remedy. Teubner's claim is that critical accounts of law and society require reformulation in the light of the sophisticated diagnoses of late modernity in the writings of Niklas Luhmann, Jacques Derrida and select examples of modernist literature. Autopoiesis, deconstruction and other post-foundational epistemological and political realities compel us to confront the fact that fundamental democratic concepts such as law and justice can no longer be based on theories of stringent argumentation or analytical philosophy. We must now approach law in terms of contingency and self-subversion rather than in terms of logical consistency and rational coherence.

      Trade Review

      ‘For a number of years now Gunther Teubner has been one of the most important and visible figures in the sociology of law. His concept of “societal constitutionalism” has largely shaped the perspective of constitutional sociology. In these essays he deploys the heuristic power of systems theory to argue against a purely political constitutionalism and in favour of re-conceiving constitutionalisation across social fields. The collection represents a highly significant contribution to one of the key theoretical debates of our time.’
      Emilios Christodoulidis, Chair of Jurisprudence, School of Law, University of Glasgow

      -- .

      Table of Contents

      Introduction: Gunther Teubner’s foundational paradox - Andreas Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos
      Part I: Law, literature and deconstruction
      1 Self-subversive justice: contingency or transcendence formula of law?
      2 The economics of the gift – the positivity of justice: the mutual paranoia of Jacques Derrida and Niklas Luhmann
      3 Dealing with paradoxes of law: Derrida, Luhmann, Wiethölter
      4 The Law before its law: Franz Kafka on the (im)possibility of Law’s self-reflection
      Part II: Juridical epistemology: reconstructing the horizontal effects of human rights, the private-public dichotomy, and contracting
      5 The anonymous matrix: human rights violations by ‘private’ transnational actors
      6 After privatisation? The many autonomies of private law
      7 In the blind spot: the hybridisation of contracting
      Part III: The dark side of functional differentiation: the normative response of societal constitutionalism
      8 A constitutional moment? The logics of ‘hitting the bottom’
      9 Global Bukovina: legal pluralism in the world society
      10 Regime-collisions: the vain search for legal unity in the fragmentation of global law
      11 Horizontal constitutional rights as conflict-of-laws rules: how transnational pharmaceutical groups manipulate scientific publications
      12 The project of constitutional sociology: irritating nation state constitutionalism
      13 Exogenous self-binding: how social subsystems externalise their foundational paradoxes in the process of constitutionalisation
      Afterword: the milestones of Teubner’s neo-pluralism - Alberto Febbrajo
      Index

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