Principles of Legislation
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Description
A legislature is a place for making law, and because law is a serious matter affecting the freedom and interests of all the members of the community, legislating is an activity we ought to take seriously. It is like marriage in the Book of Common Prayer—not to be enterprised nor taken in hand carelessly, lightly or wantonly, but discreetly, advisedly and soberly, duly considering the purposes for which legislatures have been instituted and considering also the harm and injustice that poorly conceived or hastily enacted legislation may do. In this chapter, I want to consider some principles that I believe ought to govern the activities that take place in and around legislative institutions. My topic—“Principles of Legislation”—is a common one. But the sense in which I am using it may be unfamiliar. I want to distinguish the principles of legislation that I will be talking about from two other sorts of legislative principles—the principles of a utilitarian like Jeremy Bentham and the principles of a theorist of justice like John Rawls.
Source Publication
The Least Examined Branch: The Role of Legislatures in the Constitutional State
Source Editors/Authors
Richard Bauman, Tsvi Kahana
Publication Date
2006
Recommended Citation
Waldron, Jeremy, "Principles of Legislation" (2006). Faculty Chapters. 1604.
https://gretchen.law.nyu.edu/fac-chapt/1604
