Wednesday, May 6, 2020
Designing A Formal Textualist Theory Of Statutory...
Can a corrective approach to Scrivenerââ¬â¢s Error find conceptual room in a formal textualist theory of statutory interpretation? 1. Introduction. 2. The incompatibility of correction in intent-skeptical textualism. i) A negative account approved: Siegelââ¬â¢s axiom. ii) A positive account rejected: Manningââ¬â¢s attempt. 3. The incompatibility of non-intent-skepticism and faithful agency: a response to Ohlendorf. i) Getting Raz wrong: a theory built on sand. ii) Getting Raz right: in support of skepticism. 4. Conclusion. 1.Introduction This essay will conclude there is no conceptual room for a corrective approach to scrivenerââ¬â¢s error in a textualist theory of statutory interpretation. To do so I will seek to establish two main premises, from which necessarily follows my conclusion: The first main premise states that an error cannot be judicially corrected in an intent-skeptical theory of textualism. I will establish this by supporting Siegelââ¬â¢s axiomatic rejection of correction and by critiquing Manningââ¬â¢s attempt to find justification for correction in textualism. The second main premise states that conceptions of textualism that employ non-intent-skepticism in order to correct errors do so in contravention of the core textualist principle of faithful agency: therefore non-intent-skeptical justifications are not rightly textualist. By way of example of the pitfalls of attempting to reconcile non-intent-skepticism with faithful agency I will examine what I consider the most
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