Properties of Law is a legal-theoretical analysis about modern
state law; about sociality, normativity and plurality as its
properties, and what will come after modern state law. The main
objective of this study is to offer a legal theoretical
recapitulation of modern state law that avoids the fallacies of
Legal Positivism. This calls for a relationist approach where law's
sociality is related to normativity, and normativity to sociality.
Avoiding Legal Positivism's fallacies also includes refraining from
extrapolating from modern state law to law in general; replacing
Legal Positivism's conceptual universalism with sensitivity to the
varieties of law, and acknowledging that law existed before modern
state law, that it will exist after modern state law, and that
other law exists alongside modern state law. The book concludes
with a discussion of the impact of digitalization on law.
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