Stephen Breyer: Introduction: The International Constitutional
Judge
1: Christopher L. Eisgruber: Should Constitutional Judges Be
Philosophers?
2: James E. Fleming: The Place of History and Philosophy in the
Moral Reading of the American Constitution
3: Rebecca L. Brown: How Constitutional Theory Found its Soul: The
Contributions of Ronald Dworkin
4: S. L. Hurley: Coherence, Hypothetical Cases, and Precedent
5: Scott Hershovitz: Integrity and Stare Decisis
6: Dale Smith: The Many Faces of Political Integrity
7: Jeremy Waldron: Did Dworkin Ever Answer the Crits?
8: Stephen Perry: Associative Obligations and the Obligation to
Obey the Law
9: John Gardner: Law s Aims in Law s Empire
10: Mark Greenberg: How Facts Make Law
11: Mark Greenberg: Hartian Positivism and Normative Facts: How
Facts Make Law II
Ronald Dworkin: Response
Scott Hershovitz received a D.Phil. in Law from the University of Oxford in 2001, where he studied as a Rhodes Scholar. He has published in the Oxford Journal of Legal Studies and Legal Theory.
`Exploring Law's Empire makes good reading'
Times Literary Supplement
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