This article contains a critical review of the provisions in the Dutch penal code regarding group defamation and hate speech. It is argued that not only these provisions themselves but also their application by the Dutch supreme court, constitutes a problem for the legitimacy and functioning of representative democracy. This is due to the tendency of the supreme court to employ special constraints for offensive, hateful or discriminatory speech by politicians. Because such a special constraint is not provided or even implied by the legislator, the jurisprudence of the supreme court is likely to end up in judicial overreach and therefore constitutes a potential – if not actual – breach in the separation of powers. In order to forestall these consequences, the protection of particularly political speech should be improved, primarily by a revision of the articles 137c and 137d of the Dutch penal code or the extension of parliamentary immunity. |
Zoekresultaat: 16 artikelen
De zoekresultaten worden gefilterd op:Tijdschrift Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy x
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 2 2020 |
Trefwoorden | Freedom of speech, Separation of powers, Criminal law, Hate speech, Legal certainty |
Auteurs | Jip Stam |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Artikel |
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 2 2019 |
Trefwoorden | oprichting, doelstelling, band met de rechtspraktijk, rechtsfilosofie en rechtstheorie, internationalisering (van Duits naar Engels) |
Auteurs | Corjo Jansen |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
De Vereeniging voor Wijsbegeerte des Rechts (VWR) is opgericht op 28 december 1918. Zij had tot doel de studie van de rechtsfilosofie en het maatschappelijk leven. Deze studie moest tevens relevant zijn voor de rechtspraktijk. Vanaf haar oprichting kende de VWR een sterke internationale oriëntatie, aanvankelijk gericht op Duitsland, later vooral op het Verenigd Koninkrijk en de VS. In de jaren zeventig en tachtig van de vorige eeuw beleefde de VWR wat betreft belangstelling en ledenaantal haar hoogtepunt. In 2016 besloot zij – na een gestage neergang – de band met de Nederlandstalige (praktijk)jurist weer aan te halen. |
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 1 2019 |
Auteurs | Thomas Jacobus de Jong |
Samenvatting |
In deze bijdrage staat de activiteit van bewijzen in strafzaken centraal. Betoogd wordt dat de vigerende rationalistische opvatting van strafrechtelijk bewijzen eraan voorbij gaat dat het bewijzen zich allereerst voltrekt op een vóór-reflectief niveau. Het primaire blikveld van de mens is namelijk niet het objectiverende kennen, zoals in de rationele bewijstheorieën wordt voorondersteld, maar de praktische relatie tot de wereld. In dit kader wordt eerst de filosofische achtergrond van de rationalistische bewijsopvatting in kaart gebracht, in het bijzonder de invloed van Aristoteles en Descartes. Vervolgens worden de daaruit voortkomende bevindingen aan de hand van ideeën en inzichten die zijn ontleend aan de existentiële fenomenologie kritisch gewaardeerd. Dit leidt tot de uiteenzetting van een hermeneutische opvatting van strafrechtelijk bewijzen. |
Redactioneel |
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 2 2018 |
Trefwoorden | Luban, humanity, dehumanization, Radbruch, Arendt |
Auteurs | Luigi Corrias en Wouter Veraart |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Introducing the special issue, we point out how the notion of an ‘enemy of all humanity’ challenges the very foundations of international (criminal) law. We also give an overview of the other contributions. |
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 2 2018 |
Trefwoorden | Cicero, Augustine, Bartolus, piracy, universal jurisdiction |
Auteurs | Louis Sicking |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Piracy holds a special place within the field of international law because of the universal jurisdiction that applies. This article reconsiders the role of piracy in the development of universal jurisdiction. While usually a connection is established between Cicero’s ‘enemy of all’ and modern conceptions of pirates, it is argued that ‘enemy of the human species’ or ‘enemy of humanity’ is a medieval creation, used by Bartolus, which must be understood in the wake of the Renaissance of the twelfth century and the increased interest for the study of Roman Law. The criminalization of the pirate in the late Middle Ages must be understood not only as a consequence of royal power claiming a monopoly of violence at sea. Both the Italian city-states and the Hanse may have preceded royal power in criminalizing pirates. All the while, political motives in doing so were never absent. |
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 1 2015 |
Auteurs | Iris van Domselaar |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
How best to account for moral quality in adjudication? This article proposes a six-pack of judicial virtues as part of a truly virtue-centred approach to adjudication. These virtues are presented as both constitutive and indispensible for realizing moral quality in adjudication. In addition, it will be argued that in order to honour the inherent relational dimension of adjudication a judge should not only possess these judicial virtues to a sufficient degree, he should also have the attitude of a civic friend. The Aristotelian concept of civic friendship will be proposed as an important complement to a virtue-ethical approach to adjudication. |
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 1 2014 |
Trefwoorden | interactionism, Lon Fuller, interactional law, legal pluralism, concept of law |
Auteurs | Wibren van der Burg |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Two phenomena that challenge theories of law in the beginning of the twenty-first century are the regulatory explosion and the emergence of horizontal and interactional forms of law. In this paper, I develop a theory that can address these two phenomena, namely legal interactionism, a theory inspired by the work of Fuller and Selznick. In a pluralist approach, legal interactionism recognizes both interactional law and enacted law, as well as other sources such as contract. We should aim for a pluralistic and gradual concept of law. Because of this pluralist and gradual character, legal interactionism can also do justice to global legal pluralism and to the dynamic intertwinement of health law and bioethics. |
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 1 2014 |
Trefwoorden | age discrimination, intergenerational justice, complete-life view, statistical discrimination, anti-discrimination law |
Auteurs | Axel Gosseries |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This paper provides an account of what makes age discrimination special, going through a set of possible justifications. In the end, it turns out that a full understanding of the specialness of age-based differential treatment requires that we consider together the ‘reliable proxy,’ the ‘complete-life neutrality,’ the ‘sequence efficiency’ and the ‘affirmative egalitarian’ accounts. Depending on the specific age criteria, all four accounts may apply or only some of them. This is the first key message of this paper. The second message of the paper has to do with the age group/birth cohort distinction. All measures that have a differential impact on different cohorts also tend to have a differential impact on various age groups during the transition. The paper points at the practical implications of anti-age-discrimination law for differential treatment between birth cohorts. The whole argument is confronted all along with ECJ cases. |
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 2 2012 |
Trefwoorden | enforcement of morals, liberalism, liberty, political liberalism, Rawls |
Auteurs | Alex Bood |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This article examines how a liberal public morality can be most successfully defended against perfectionism. First of all the five most important liberal arguments for freedom are taken from what is called the liberal canon: a number of characteristic works of John Locke, Immanuel Kant, John Stuart Mill, Isaiah Berlin, Joseph Raz, Ronald Dworkin, and John Rawls. These five arguments are identified as: social and political realism, respect for autonomy, fallibility of ideas, pluralism, and respect for reasonableness. Next, the persuasiveness of these arguments is assessed, starting with the argument of respect for reasonableness, which is at the heart of Rawls’s political liberalism. It is concluded that in itself this argument is not strong enough to persuade perfectionists. A powerful defence of a liberal public morality needs the other arguments for freedom as well. Finally, the paper outlines how these other arguments can strengthen the argument of respect for reasonableness in a coherent manner. |
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 2 2012 |
Trefwoorden | general jurisprudence, globalization, global legal pluralism, legal positivism, analytical jurisprudence |
Auteurs | Sidney Richards |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Globalization is commonly cited as an important factor in theorising legal phenomena in the contemporary world. Although many legal disciplines have sought to adapt their theories to globalization, progress has been comparatively modest within contemporary analytical jurisprudence. This paper aims to offer a survey of recent scholarship on legal theory and globalization and suggests various ways in which these writings are relevant to the project of jurisprudence. This paper argues, more specifically, that the dominant interpretation of globalization frames it as a particular form of legal pluralism. The resulting concept – global legal pluralism – comes in two broad varieties, depending on whether it emphasizes normative or institutional pluralism. This paper goes on to argue that these concepts coincide with two central themes of jurisprudence, namely its concern with normativity and institutionality. Finally, this paper reflects on the feasibility of constructing a ‘general’ and ‘descriptive’ jurisprudence in light of globalization. |
Discussie |
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 3 2010 |
Trefwoorden | global constitutionalism, legitimacy, human rights, Neil Walker, post-state democracy |
Auteurs | Morag Goodwin |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This paper approaches Walker’s work from the perspective of the ubiquity of human rights language within the rhetoric of global constitutionalism. Building on Walker’s description of the relationship between constitutionalism and democracy, what I wish to suggest is that the spread of human rights discourse is intimately connected with attempts to apply constitutional discourse beyond the state. By highlighting the way in which human rights have become place-takers for political legitimacy in discussions of international constitutionalism, the paper is intended to challenge Walker to state his own position more forcefully and to develop further his insight concerning the irresolvable tension in the iterative relationship between constitutionalism and democracy. |
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 3 2010 |
Trefwoorden | constitutionalism, globalization, democracy, modernity, postnational |
Auteurs | Neil Walker |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
The complexity of the relationship between democracy and modern constitutionalism is revealed by treating democracy as an incomplete ideal. This refers both to the empirical incompleteness of democracy as unable to supply its own terms of application – the internal dimension – and to the normative incompleteness of democracy as guide to good government – the external dimension. Constitutionalism is a necessary response to democratic incompleteness – seeking to realize (the internal dimension) and to supplement and qualify democracy (the external dimension). How democratic incompleteness manifests itself, and how constitutionalism responds to incompleteness evolves and alters, revealing the relationship between constitutionalism and democracy as iterative. The paper concentrates on the iteration emerging from the current globalizing wave. The fact that states are no longer the exclusive sites of democratic authority compounds democratic incompleteness and complicates how constitutionalism responds. Nevertheless, the key role of constitutionalism in addressing the double incompleteness of democracy persists under globalization. This continuity reflects how the deep moral order of political modernity, in particular the emphasis on individualism, equality, collective agency and progress, remains constant while its institutional architecture, including the forms of its commitment to democracy, evolves. Constitutionalism, itself both a basic orientation and a set of design principles for that architecture, remains a necessary support for and supplement to democracy. Yet post-national constitutionalism, even more than its state-centred predecessor, remains contingent upon non-democratic considerations, so reinforcing constitutionalism’s normative and sociological vulnerability. This conclusion challenges two opposing understandings of the constitutionalism of the global age – that which indicts global constitutionalism because of its weakened democratic credentials and that which assumes that these weakened democratic credentials pose no problem for post-national constitutionalism, which may instead thrive through a heightened emphasis on non-democratic values. |
Discussie |
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 3 2010 |
Trefwoorden | international constitutionalism, democracy, international law, fragmentation, international politics |
Auteurs | Wouter G. Werner |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
This paper agrees with Walker on the existence of a tension between democracy and constitutionalism, but questions whether democracy and (international) constitutionalism necessarily depend on each other. While democracy needs constitutionalism on normative grounds, as an empirical matter it may also rest on alternative political structures. Moreover, it is questionable whether democracy is indeed the solution to the incompleteness of international constitutionalism. Traditional forms of democracy do not lend themselves well to transplantation to the international level and could even intensify some problems of international governance. Attempts to democratize international relations should be carried out prudentially, with due regard for possible counterproductive effects. |
Boekbespreking |
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 3 2009 |
Trefwoorden | political theology, economic theology, Schmitt, Peterson |
Auteurs | Dr. mr. Thom Holterman |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Thom Holterman, book review of Giorgio Agamben, Le règne et la gloire. Homo sacer (II, 2). Paris: Éditions du Seuil, 2008 |
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 3 2008 |
Trefwoorden | delinquent, aansprakelijkheid, schuld, onrechtmatigheid, opzet, auto, identificatie, loon, onachtzaamheid, onrechtmatige daad |
Auteurs | R. Schwitters |
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Tijdschrift | Netherlands Journal of Legal Philosophy, Aflevering 1 2004 |
Trefwoorden | doding, moord, redenering, geweld, jurylid, aansprakelijkheid, delinquent, deskundigheid, getuige, jury |
Auteurs | G. Roermond |