Current location - Education and Training Encyclopedia - Graduation thesis - Catalogue of legal methodology works
Catalogue of legal methodology works
Student Preface Introduction to Legal Methodology —— Introduction to Translation Chapter I Debate on Modern Methods Section I From Interest Law to Evaluation Law Section II On Beyond the Standard of Legal Evaluation Section III On the Connotation of Norms and the Structure of Facts Section IV Looking for Proper Personal Judgment Section V On the Procedure of Views and Arguments Section VI On the Mode of Legal Constraint and Evaluation Section VII On System Issues Section VIII On Justice in Philosophy of Law Chapter II Introduction: Law. General characteristics Section 1 The expression method of law and the discipline of studying this method Section 2 As a normative science, Language of normative statements Section III Law as "understood" knowledge Section IV Value-oriented thinking in law Section V Significance of law to legal practice Section VI Contribution of law to knowledge Section VII Methodology of self-reflection as law in interpretation Chapter III Legal theory Section I Logical structure of law Section II Incomplete law Section III Law as part of regulations Section IV Meeting of most laws or rules Section V Logical mode of law application Chapter IV Case The formation of a fact and its legal judgment Section 1: Case facts as events and statements Section 2: Legal choice that forms the basis of case facts Section 3: Necessary judgment Section 4: Interpretation of meaning; Section 5: Actual case facts Chapter 5: Legal interpretation Section 1: Tasks of interpretation Section 2: Standards of interpretation Section 3: Factors affecting interpretation Section 4: Some special problems of interpretation Chapter 6: Methods for judges to continue to create laws Section 6: 1, Continuation of Law in Legal Proceedings-Continuation of Interpretation Section II Filling legal loopholes Section III Solving conflicts of principles and norms through "measurement of legal interests" Section IV Continuation of laws beyond legal plans Section V Significance of "precedent" to the formation of "judge law" Chapter VII Concepts in law.