
Sovereignty's Promise
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Content
- Cover
- Contents
- Epigraph
- Table of Cases and Legislation
- Prologue-Hobbes and Legal Order
- 1. The demands of legality
- 2. The people as the authors of sovereignty
- 3. The constitution of legal order
- 4. Trust as the basis of the state-subject relationship
- Chapter I-Introduction: The State as Fiduciary and the Rule of Law
- 1.1 Introduction: Roncarelli and the fact of sovereignty
- 1.2 A brief history of the fiduciary concept
- 1.3 Towards fiduciary duties in public settings
- 1.4 A legal conception
- 1.5 A relational conception
- 1.6 A Kantian, interactional conception
- 1.7 A challenge to libertarianism
- 1.8 Beyond the state
- 1.9 Summary of the argument
- PART I-THE CROWN-NATIVE FIDUCIARY RELATIONSHIP
- Chapter II-Seeking Sovereignty
- 2.1 Introduction
- 2.2 Guerin, Sparrow, and the resistance of Aboriginal treaty rights to dualism
- 2.3 The basis of the Crown-Native fiduciary relationship
- 2.4 The limits of the Crown's legitimacy
- Chapter III-Some Objections
- 3.1 Introduction
- 3.2 Paternalism, colonialism, and legal pluralism
- 3.3 Reconciling competing claims
- 3.4 The sui generis argument
- PART II-THE FIDUCIARY THEORY OF THE STATE
- Chapter IV-Fiduciary Relationships and the Presumption of Trust
- 4.1 Introduction
- 4.2 The nature of sovereignty
- 4.3 Fiduciary relationships and the presumption of trust
- 4.4 Relationships arising by operation of law
- 4.5 Do fiduciary obligations rely on voluntary undertakings?
- 4.6 Fiduciary power as administrative power
- 4.7 Vulnerability as incapacity
- 4.8 Trust as the basis of the fiduciary's authority and duty
- 4.9 Pure fiduciary duties and their reliance on trust
- 4.10 The state as fiduciary-the subject's trust in the state
- Chapter V-The Duty to Obey the Law
- 5.1 Introduction
- 5.2 The terms of the debate
- 5.3 The limits of consent
- 5.4 Parental authority
- 5.5 The legitimacy of legality
- 5.6 A fiduciary theory of the duty to obey the law
- 5.7 Opting out
- 5.8 A public agent of necessity
- PART III-THE FIDUCIARY NATURE OF THE RULE OF LAW
- Chapter VI-Judicial Ambivalence to Public Fiduciary Duties
- 6.1 Introduction
- 6.2 Political trusts
- 6.3 Authorson: Guerin extended
- 6.4 Harris: Guerin retrenched
- 6.5 English law's marriage of administrative power to fiduciary duty
- 6.6 Cross-fertilization between public and private fiduciary contexts
- 6.7 The emergence of public fiduciary duties
- 6.8 The paucity of fiduciary doctrine in public law
- Chapter VII-Procedural Fairness-A Pandora's Box of Legality
- 7.1 Introduction
- 7.2 Procedural fairness as a public fiduciary duty
- 7.3 The justification requirement
- 7.4 Contextualism, content, and important interests
- 7.5 The Dunsmuir reversal
- Chapter VIII-Administrative Law as Solicitude-Reasonable Decision-Making
- 8.1 Introduction
- 8.2 The legitimacy of the administrative state
- 8.3 From jurisdictional review to deference?
- 8.4 Deference as a postulate of the rule of law
- 8.5 The content of deference
- 8.6 Fundamental values
- 8.7 Public justification
- 8.8 Fundamental values and deference as respect cut down
- 8.9 Conclusion
- Chapter IX-The Rule of Law and Human Rights
- 9.1 Introduction
- 9.2 The internal morality and the fiduciary interpretation of reciprocity
- 9.3 Fuller's appreciation of freedom and dignity
- 9.4 Raz and slavery
- 9.5 The moral difference the internal morality necessarily makes
- 9.6 From the rule of law to human rights
- 9.7 Is the rule of law now just the rule of good law?
- Bibliography
- Index
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- O
- P
- R
- S
- T
- U
- V
- W
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