DABIN (Jean)
    GENERAL DOCTRINE OF THE STATE, ELEMENTS OF POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Édition :
    Brussels / Paris
Date :
    1939
    octavo, half-bound in burgundy cloth, good condition except for some blue underlining, 507 p.
    Published a few years before his General Theory of Law, this book constitutes Dabin's general theory of public law. At the heart of its issues lies the question of the relationship between law and the state, and one cannot help but recall the decisive passages the author devoted to the state's subordination to the law. His efforts to move beyond the theory of self-limitation in favor of a concept of "common honesty," reminiscent of Rawls's contemporary doctrine, are particularly noteworthy. To situate Dabin's thought within that of his contemporaries, one might also consider Dabin's doctrine a "tempered Duguism." In our view, this book deserves to be rediscovered.

Référence : 7821

Mots-clés : Constitutional Law

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