Artikel

'Rules about rules' and the endogenous dynamics of international law: Dissonance reduction as a mechanism of secondary rule-making

We can observe some developments that indicate a further strengthening of human rights and the rule of law even after 2001. These developments are puzzling as they occurred despite largely unfavourable scope conditions. This article offers an account of these developments that focuses on dynamics endogenous to the law. These internal dynamics provide a causal mechanism that sets in once a certain threshold of legalization has been reached. We employ the Hartian notion of secondary rules which we think is an especially helpful conceptual tool to analyse the endogenous dynamics of legal systems. To the extent that law is programmed towards consistency, secondary rules become necessary in an environment of rapidly increasing legal density to govern the complexity resulting from this proliferation of norms. Upholding consistency is necessary to maintain the autonomy of law in a Luhmannian sense and the ‘morality’ of the legal system in a Fullerian sense. Our goal is to show this and at the same move beyond an argument of system or normative functionality by identifying causal mechanisms that can explain the law’s built-in drive towards secondary rules, and that are in accordance with broader social science theory. We use some insights from cognitive psychology to develop these causal mechanisms further. While testing these causal mechanisms would be beyond the scope of this paper, we hope to provide the conceptual tools for future empirical research on the dynamics of secondary rule-making and offer some empirical illustrations to demonstrate how dissonance reduction operates in practice.

Sprache
Englisch

Erschienen in
Journal: Global Constitutionalism ; ISSN: 2045-3825 ; Volume: 3 ; Year: 2014 ; Issue: 2 ; Pages: 236-273 ; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press

Klassifikation
Wirtschaft
Thema
cognitive mechanisms
dissonance reduction
endogenous dynamics of legal systems
legal consistence
secondary rules

Ereignis
Geistige Schöpfung
(wer)
Reinold, Theresa
Zürn, Michael
Ereignis
Veröffentlichung
(wer)
Cambridge University Press
(wo)
Cambridge
(wann)
2014

DOI
doi:10.1017/S2045381714000045
Handle
Letzte Aktualisierung
10.03.2025, 11:43 MEZ

Datenpartner

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Objekttyp

  • Artikel

Beteiligte

  • Reinold, Theresa
  • Zürn, Michael
  • Cambridge University Press

Entstanden

  • 2014

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