Dear all

Following Anthony Connolly's previously advertised talk on Thursday 24 October 
- see 
here<http://sydney.edu.au/news/law/457.html?eventcategoryid=40&eventid=10452> 
for further information - another JSI Seminar will take place at 6pm on 
Thursday 31 October, when Mark Bennett from Victoria University of Wellington 
will deliver a paper entitled "Fuller's Challenge and the Self-Understanding of 
Contemporary Legal Positivism". See below for further information. If you would 
like to attend, please register 
here<http://sydney.edu.au/news/law/457.html?eventcategoryid=40&eventid=10465>.

If you would like to join us for dinner after the seminar, please let me know 
as soon as possible.

Cheers,
Kev

Fuller's Challenge and the Self-Understanding of Contemporary Legal Positivism
In this seminar, Mark Bennett will argue that Fuller's challenge to legal 
positivism - to make sense of the connection between law and the rule of law - 
has played a similar role in the development of legal positivism as Dworkin's 
did in the last quarter of the 20th century. It forced Hartian legal 
positivists to reflect on the core tenets of their tradition's understanding of 
law, and to choose whether, where, and how, to make concessions to Fuller's 
account of the rule of law. In particular, most prominent positivists accept 
that conformity to Fuller's principles is generally of moral value, and that 
there is some necessary connection between such conformity and the existence of 
law. Yet despite these concessions, positivists have not accepted his 
anti-positivist account of legal validity and legal obligation. This does not 
mean that they reject Fuller's analysis of the moral obligations of fidelity to 
law - in fact, legal positivists seem to be amenable to much of the Fullerian 
view, so long as it is understood as disclosing judges' moral obligations, 
rather than their legal obligations. If this is so, the traditional debates 
between positivists and anti-positivists lose much of their importance. This 
seminar draws on the analysis set out in Bennett's recent thesis, "Legal 
positivism and the Rule of Law: the Hartian Response to Fuller's Challenge", 
available athttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/35776- especially the final chapter.

Dr Mark Bennett has been a lecturer at Victoria University of Wellington 
Faculty of Law since 2010. He had previously undertaken his undergraduate 
education in law, classics and sociology there, subsequently being appointed as 
an Assistant Lecturer, while also completing an LLM with Distinction. He was 
then awarded the Frank Knox Memorial Fellowship to study for an LLM at Harvard 
Law School, after which he completed doctoral studies at the University of 
Toronto, supported by a Connaught Fellowship. His thesis 'Legal positivism and 
the Rule of Law: the Hartian Response to Fuller's Challenge' - available at 
http://hdl.handle.net/1807/35776 - examines the competing understandings of the 
idea of 'the rule of law' in contemporary legal philosophy. His recent 
publications include contributions to two books concerning regulatory reform in 
New Zealand, and articles on legal philosophy in Law and Philosophy, the 
Australian Journal of Legal Philosophy, the Canadian Bar Review, and the 
Victoria University of Wellington Law Review (forthcoming). Some of these are 
available on his SSRN page - 
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=682942.
His current research includes work towards book manuscript based on his 
doctoral thesis, and a project examining whether equity law should be 
understood, in many of its manifestations, as subverting justice and the rule 
of law.



KEVIN WALTON

Sydney Law School | Julius Stone Institute of Jurisprudence
THE UNIVERSITY OF SYDNEY

T +61 2 9351 0286  | F +61 2 9351 0200
E [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>  | W 
http://sydney.edu.au<http://sydney.edu.au/>



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