Tracing the Permission to Act in Necessity in the Germanic Tradition

Germanic law accepts that some acts of necessity are permitted ('justified acts of necessity', or, in German, 'gerechtfertigte Notstandshandlungen'). The present article shows the intellectual history of this rule and what may be learned from it. It presents the debate on permit...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: David Messner-Kreuzbauer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Advanced Research School in Law and Jurisprudence (Ars Iuris Vienna) 2024-02-01
Series:University of Vienna Law Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://viennalawreview.com/index.php/vlr/article/view/8531
Description
Summary:Germanic law accepts that some acts of necessity are permitted ('justified acts of necessity', or, in German, 'gerechtfertigte Notstandshandlungen'). The present article shows the intellectual history of this rule and what may be learned from it. It presents the debate on permitting acts of necessity in its first appearances in Roman pragmatism, in medieval common good reasoning, and in the context of individualistic views on entitlements in the early modern ages. It suggests what thoughts the doctrine may represent in the pluralism of theories in our times and concludes with an outlook on the lessons of this discussion for how entitlements and rights should more generally be understood today. 
ISSN:2521-3962